Abstract

This work explores the links between ecogeographical barriers and clines, and the boundaries of infraspecific biological entities. The distribution of the three subspecies and eight morphotypes of the Neanurinae Deutonura deficiens (Collembola) are mapped and commented based on 570 records. The species inhabits a wide range of forest habitats from the north of Portugal to southeastern France. The subspecies and morphotypes constitute homogeneous geographic sets arranged as a mosaic of closely related forms. A few overlapping zones between subspecies or morphotypes have been detected, some of them having the character of hybrid zones; on the whole however, overlap is small or rare and allopatry or parapatry is the general pattern. Current range boundaries of subspecies and morphotypes were found to be usually not determined by major hydrographical and topographical barriers, with the noticeable exception of the Rhône River. At subspecies level, the morphological cline of increasing tuberculization correlated to the bioclimatic gradient from Mediterranean to Atlantic climates, already recorded by Deharveng (1984. Polymorphisme et polytypisme morphologiques chez quelques Neanurinae européens. Rev. Ecol. Biol. Sol. 21, 533–562), is confirmed on the present data set. Conversely, ecological boundaries, known to constrain species distribution in many living groups of the region, do not fit the contact zones between the different morphotypes of the three subspecies of D. deficiens . The eight recognized forms appear to be at different degrees of reproductive isolation, illustrating active speciation process possibly inherited from recent ecogeographical events. A more detailed sampling on contact zones and a robust phylogenetic hypothesis are needed at this stage for progressing in our understanding of this complex pattern.

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