Published October 22, 2012 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Crossing the uncrossable: novel trans-valley biogeographic patterns revealed in the genetic history of low dispersal mygalomorph spiders (Antrodiaetidae, Antrodiaetus) from California

  • 1. San Diego State University
  • 2. University of California, Riverside

Description

Antrodiaetus riversi is a dispersal-limited, habitat specialized mygalomorph spider species endemic to mesic woodlands of northern and central California. Here we build upon prior phylogeographic research using a much larger geographic sample and include additional nuclear genes, providing more detailed biogeographic insights throughout the range of this complex. Of particular interest is the uncovering of unexpected and replicated trans-valley biogeographic patterns, where in two separate genetic clades western haplotypes in the California south Coast Ranges are phylogenetically closely-related to eastern haplotypes from central and northern Sierran foothills. In both instances, these trans-valley phylogenetic patterns are strongly supported by multiple genes. These western and eastern populations are currently separated by the Central Valley, a well-recognized modern-day and historical biogeographic barrier in California. For one clade the directionality is clearly northeast to southwest, and all available evidence is consistent with a jump dispersal event estimated at 1.2-1.3 million years ago. During this time period, paleogeographic data indicate that northern Sierran rivers emptied to the ocean in the south Coast Ranges, rather than at the San Francisco Bay. For the other trans-valley clade genetic evidence is less conclusive regarding the mechanism and directionality of biogeographic exchange, although the estimated timeframe is similar (approximately 1.8 Ma). Despite the large number of biogeographic studies previously conducted in central California, to the best of our knowledge no prior studies have discussed or revealed a northern Sierran to south Coast Range biogeographic connection. This uniqueness may reflect the low-dispersal biology of mygalomorph spiders, where "post-event" gene exchange rarely erases historical biogeographic signal.

Notes

Files

AtypoidesBirthDeathIncomTP.xml

Files (1.1 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:6c4c38be4add1268f66bce35c36b7f38
9.6 kB Download
md5:5d386d76bcf070fca848b2e8206f0306
264.1 kB Preview Download
md5:b1b083882bf0da1e84598ebb8c1057c8
263.6 kB Preview Download
md5:e0422ad9e5fac193bbc83460c42bd34d
262.8 kB Preview Download
md5:9d6b42066bf585515b02f2c5371a627e
263.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/mec.12130 (DOI)