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Abstract
The tidewater goby, Eucyclogobius newberryi, inhabits discrete, seasonally
closed, estuaries and lagoons along approximately 1500 km of California coastline.
This species is euryhaline but has no explicit marine stage, yet population
extirpation and recolonization data suggest tidewater gobies disperse intermittently
via the sea. Analyses of mitochondrial control region and cytochrome b sequences
demonstrate a deep evolutionary bifurcation in the vicinity of Los Angeles
that separates southern California populations from all more northerly populations.
Shallower phylogeographic breaks, in the vicinities of Seacliff, Point Buchon,
Big Sur, and Point Arena segregate the northerly populations into five groups
in three geographic clusters: the "Pt. Conception" and "Ventura" groups between
Los Angeles and Pt. Buchon, a lone "Estero Bay" group from central California,
and "San Francisco" and "Cape Mendocino" groups from northern California.
The phylogenetic relationships between and patterns of molecular diversity
within the six groups are consistent with repeated, and sometimes rapid, northward
and southward range expansions out of central California caused by Quaternary
climate change. Plio-Pleistocene tectonism, Quaternary coastal geography and
hydrography, and historical human activities, probably also influenced the
modern geographic and genetic structure of E. newberryi. The phylogeography
of E. newberryi is concordant with phylogeographic patterns in several
other coastal California taxa, suggesting common extrinsic factors have had
similar effects on different species. However, there is no evidence of a phylogeographic
break coincident with a biogeographic boundary at Pt. Conception.
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