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Cryptic variation in an ecological indicator organism: mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data confirm distinct lineages of Baetis harrisoni Barnard (Ephemeroptera: Baetidae) in southern Africa
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2012
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2018-04-19
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Bayesian Inference
Maximum Parsimony
Incomplete Lineage Sorting
Rhodani
Maximum Clade Credibility
Maximum Parsimony
Incomplete Lineage Sorting
Rhodani
Maximum Clade Credibility
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Abstract
Background: Baetis harrisoni Barnard is a mayfly frequently encountered in river studies across Africa, but the
external morphological features used for identifying nymphs have been observed to vary subtly between different
geographic locations. It has been associated with a wide range of ecological conditions, including pH extremes of
pH 2.9–10.0 in polluted waters. We present a molecular study of the genetic variation within B. harrisoni across 21
rivers in its distribution range in southern Africa.
Results: Four gene regions were examined, two mitochondrial (cytochrome c oxidase subunit I [COI] and small
subunit ribosomal 16S rDNA [16S]) and two nuclear (elongation factor 1 alpha [EF1α] and phosphoenolpyruvate
carboxykinase [PEPCK]). Bayesian and parsimony approaches to phylogeny reconstruction resulted in five wellsupported major lineages, which were confirmed using a general mixed Yule-coalescent (GMYC) model. Results
from the EF1α gene were significantly incongruent with both mitochondrial and nuclear (PEPCK) results, possibly
due to incomplete lineage sorting of the EF1α gene. Mean between-clade distance estimated using the COI and
PEPCK data was found to be an order of magnitude greater than the within-clade distance and comparable to that
previously reported for other recognised Baetis species. Analysis of the Isolation by Distance (IBD) between all
samples showed a small but significant effect of IBD. Within each lineage the contribution of IBD was minimal.
Tentative dating analyses using an uncorrelated log-normal relaxed clock and two published estimates of COI
mutation rates suggest that diversification within the group occurred throughout the Pliocene and mid-Miocene
(~2.4–11.5 mya).
Conclusions: The distinct lineages of B. harrisoni correspond to categorical environmental variation, with two
lineages comprising samples from streams that flow through acidic Table Mountain Sandstone and three lineages
with samples from neutral-to-alkaline streams found within eastern South Africa, Malawi and Zambia. The results of
this study suggest that B. harrisoni as it is currently recognised is not a single species with a wide geographic range
and pH-tolerance, but may comprise up to five species under the phylogenetic species concept, each with limited
pH-tolerances, and that the B. harrisoni species group is thus in need of taxonomic review.
Citation
Pereira-da-Conceicoa et al. (2012). Cryptic variation in an ecological indicator organism: mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data confirm distinct lineages of Baetis harrisoni Barnard (Ephemeroptera: Baetidae) in southern Africa. BMC Evolutionary Biology 2012, 12:26. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/12/26
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© 2012 Pereira-da-Conceicoa et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of
the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use,
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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1471-2148