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Abstract
Populations of jellyfish, Mastigias sp., landlocked in tropical
marine lakes during the Holocene show extreme genetic isolation (0.74
<= Fst <= 1.00), founder effects (genetic diversity: 0.000 <=
pi <= 0.001), rapid morphological evolution, and behavioral adaptation.
These results demonstrate incipient speciation in what we propose may
be modern analogues of Plio-Pleistocene populations isolated in ocean
basins by glacially lowered sea-level and counterparts to modern marine
populations isolated on archipelagos and other distant shores. Geographic
isolation in novel environments, even if geologically brief, may contribute
much to marine biodiversity because evolutionary rates in marine plankton
can rival the most rapid speciation seen for limnetic species such as
cichlids and sticklebacks. Marine lakes present situations rare in their
clarity for studying evolution in marine taxa.
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