Abstract

BackgroundThe aim of this research was to identify the effects of Pleistocene climate change on the distribution of fauna in Tasmania, and contrast this with biotic responses in other temperate regions in the Northern and Southern Hemisphere that experienced glacial activity during this epoch. This was achieved by examining the phylogeographic patterns in a widely distributed Tasmanian endemic reptile, Niveoscincus ocellatus. 204 individuals from 29 populations across the distributional range of N. ocellatus were surveyed for variation at two mitochondrial genes (ND2, ND4), and two nuclear genes (β-globin, RPS8). Phylogenetic relationships were reconstructed using a range of methods (maximum parsimony, Bayesian inference and haplotype networks), and the demographic histories of populations were assessed (AMOVA, Tajima’s D, Fu’s Fs, mismatch distributions, extended Bayesian skyline plots, and relaxed random walk analyses).ResultsThere was a high degree of mitochondrial haplotype diversity (96 unique haplotypes) and phylogeographic structure, where spatially distinct groups were associated with Tasmania’s Northeast and a large area covering Southeast and Central Tasmania. Phylogeographic structure was also present within each major group, but the degree varied regionally, being highest in the Northeast. Only the Southeastern group had a signature of demographic expansion, occurring during the Pleistocene but post-dating the Last Glacial Maximum. In contrast, nuclear DNA had low levels of variation and a lack of phylogeographic structure, and further loci should be surveyed to corroborate the mitochondrial inferences.ConclusionsThe phylogeographic patterns of N. ocellatus indicate Pleistocene range and demographic expansion in N. ocellatus, particularly in the Southeast and Central areas of Tasmania. Expansion in Central and Southeastern areas appears to have been more recent in both demographic and spatial contexts, than in Northeast Tasmania, which is consistent with inferences for other taxa of greater stability and persistence in Northeast Tasmania during the Last Glacial Maximum. These phylogeographic patterns indicate contrasting demographic histories of populations in close proximity to areas directly affected by glaciers in the Southern Hemisphere during the LGM.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12862-015-0397-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The aim of this research was to identify the effects of Pleistocene climate change on the distribution of fauna in Tasmania, and contrast this with biotic responses in other temperate regions in the Northern and Southern Hemisphere that experienced glacial activity during this epoch

  • This study investigated the phylogeography of a Tasmanian endemic reptile, the spotted snow skink (Niveoscincus ocellatus)

  • Spatial Analysis of Molecular Variance (SAMOVA) recovered a group corresponding to the Northeastern clade when testing for two populations (ΦCT = 0.50, P = 0.00), and when testing for three populations recovered groups similar to that inferred by the phylogeny (ΦCT = 0.53, P = 0.00): Northeastern, Southeastern, and Northwestern

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Summary

Introduction

The aim of this research was to identify the effects of Pleistocene climate change on the distribution of fauna in Tasmania, and contrast this with biotic responses in other temperate regions in the Northern and Southern Hemisphere that experienced glacial activity during this epoch. An increasing number of phylogeographic studies have questioned the simplicity and universality of this classical southern Europe refugia model, describing ‘cryptic’ northern refugia [6,7,8] and ‘refugia within refugia’ [8, 9] for a range of temperate European species Withstanding this growing complexity several facts remain clear—for a large proportion of taxa the LGM had a strong biogeographic influence, and that for most species a limited number of large southern refugia supported the majority of genetic diversity throughout the Pleistocene. While such generalisations can be made for Europe and other Northern Hemisphere regions, the impact of Pleistocene climate change on biota in the Southern Hemisphere remains comparatively understudied [10,11,12,13,14,15]

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