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Published March 28, 2019 | Version v1
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Data from: Next-generation phylogeography of the cockle Cerastoderma glaucum: highly heterogeneous genetic differentiation in a lagoon species

  • 1. University of Gdańsk
  • 2. Institut de Biologie Paris-Seine

Description

Aim. Coastal lagoons form an intriguing example of fragmented marine habitats. Restricted gene flow among isolated populations of lagoon species may promote their genetic divergence, and may thus provide a first step towards speciation. In the present study, the population genetic structure of the lagoon cockle Cerastoderma glaucum has been investigated to clarify the complex phylogeographic pattern found in previous studies, to localize major genetic breaks and to discuss their origin and maintenance. Location. The Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts, including the Baltic, North Sea and Black Sea. Methods. 204 C. glaucum individuals from 14 populations were genotyped using restriction-site associated DNA-sequencing (RADseq). The genetic diversity, divergence and structure were analyzed using genome-wide Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs). Phylogenetic relationships were inferred under a coalescent model using SVDquartets. Results. The RADseq approach allowed inferring phylogeogeaphic relationships with an unprecedented resolution. Three deeply divergent lineages were identified within C. glaucum that are separated by many genetic barriers: one lineage in the Aegean-Black Sea region, one in the Ionian Sea, and the last one widely distributed from the Western Mediterranean to the Baltic Sea. The nested branching pattern displayed on the species tree largely agrees with the likely scenario of C. glaucum post-glacial expansion from the Mediterranean to the Baltic Sea. Main conclusion. The genetic differentiations between geographically separated lagoons proved to be strong, highlighting the evolutionary influence of these naturally fragmented habitats. The post-glacial expansion created complex patterns of spatial segregation of genetic diversity with allele frequency gradients in many outlier loci, but also discrepancies between the nuclear and mitochondrial genetic markers that probably arose from genetic surfing of mitochondrial variation.

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Is cited by
10.1002/ece3.5070 (DOI)