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Abstract
Aim:
Recently discovered deep phylogenetic gaps in coastal California marine taxa
are geographically discordant with the provincial biogeographic boundary at
Point Conception. This discordance runs contrary to the phylogeographic hypotheses
that were derived from studies of coastal marine taxa in southeastern North
America. Here, I investigate the nature of the discrepant phylogeographic
and biogeographic patterns in coastal California.
Location: Coastal southwestern North America.
Methods: The scientific literature describing the phylogeography
and biogeography of coastal California taxa was reviewed. Data describing
life-history characteristics, habitat, and degree of phylogeographic structure
were extracted and compared. The geographic distribution of phylogenetic breaks
was compared to regional biogeographic data.
Results: All taxa were genetically variable. Those with greater
dispersal ability generally had less phylogeographic structure. Although few
taxa had very limited dispersal ability, many exhibited phylogeographic breaks
within the California Transition Zone, a region of gradual species replacement
between Oregonian and Californian biogeographic provinces. The most precisely
resolved phylogeographic breaks were geographically concordant with peaks
in the distribution of edge-effect species, which are strong indicators of
environmental discontinuities, or ecotones. Moreover, these phylogeographic
gaps, edge-effect species, and ecotones coincide geographically with Late
Pleistocene faunal discontinuities and probable long-term physical barriers
to gene flow.
Main conclusions: Contrary to prior inference, phylogeographic
patterns in coastal California marine taxa are consistent with the phylogeographic
hypotheses. The concordance of phylogeographic and biogeographic patterns
in the coastal marine faunas of southeastern and southwestern North America,
and also the Indo-Pacific, suggests that the phylogeographic hypotheses are
generally applicable to many coastal marine settings. As such, they provide
a framework for investigating and comparing patterns of evolution in disparate
coastal marine faunas.
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