Abstract
SUMMARY Previous studies suggested that the biodiversity of the mangrove-associated Bostrychia radicans/Bostrychia moritziana species complex on the Pacific coast of Central America, based on genetic and reproductive data, were low compared with similar areas on the Atlantic coast. Evolutionary scenarios were proposed based on either a recent introduction to the Pacific, or a more uniform environment leading to genetically connected populations and low differentiation between populations. We sampled more extensively in southern Mexico, Guatemala and El Salvador and sequenced the samples for the RuBisCo spacer. Our results show that genetic diversity is high in these populations. Many haplotypes retrieved are also found in the Atlantic Ocean (USA, Brazil), an observation not made before. Data suggest that populations are highly differentiated with little evidence of isolation-by-distance. The population at La Puntilla, El Salvador is highly differentiated from other populations. Data also suggest that diversity is reduced in a northerly direction, with only one haplotype, unique to Pacific Central America, found north of Chiapas, Mexico. This could be due to northern expansion of this unique genotype as sea surface temperatures ameliorated following the last glacial maximum. Our data do not support the previous proposition of low diversity in the east central Pacific and suggest that much of the Pacific Central America diversity is from before the closure of the Isthmus of Panama.
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