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1 September 2002 PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC HISTORY OF THE LAND SNAIL CANDIDULA UNIFASCIATA (HELICELLINAE, STYLOMMATOPHORA): FRAGMENTATION, CORRIDOR MIGRATION, AND SECONDARY CONTACT
Markus Pfenninger, David Posada
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Abstract

We studied sequence variation in 16S rDNA in 204 individuals from 37 populations of the land snail Candidula unifasciata (Poiret 1801) across the core species range in France, Switzerland, and Germany. Phylogeographic, nested clade, and coalescence analyses were used to elucidate the species evolutionary history. The study revealed the presence of two major evolutionary lineages that evolved in separate refuges in southeast France as result of previous fragmentation during the Pleistocene. Applying a recent extension of the nested clade analysis (Templeton 2001), we inferred that range expansions along river valleys in independent corridors to the north led eventually to a secondary contact zone of the major clades around the Geneva Basin. There is evidence supporting the idea that the formation of the secondary contact zone and the colonization of Germany might be postglacial events. The phylogeographic history inferred for C. unifasciata differs from general biogeographic patterns of postglacial colonization previously identified for other taxa, and it might represent a common model for species with restricted dispersal.

Markus Pfenninger and David Posada "PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC HISTORY OF THE LAND SNAIL CANDIDULA UNIFASCIATA (HELICELLINAE, STYLOMMATOPHORA): FRAGMENTATION, CORRIDOR MIGRATION, AND SECONDARY CONTACT," Evolution 56(9), 1776-1788, (1 September 2002). https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2002)056[1776:PHOTLS]2.0.CO;2
Received: 2 July 2001; Accepted: 11 June 2002; Published: 1 September 2002
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KEYWORDS
Helicellinae
nested clade analysis
PHYLOGEOGRAPHY
secondary contact
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