Abstract

Quaternary climate fluctuations restructured biodiversity across North American high latitudes through repeated episodes of range contraction, population isolation and divergence, and subsequent expansion. Identifying how species responded to changing environmental conditions not only allows us to explore the mode and tempo of evolution in northern taxa, but also provides a basis for forecasting future biotic response across the highly variable topography of western North America. Using a multilocus approach under a Bayesian coalescent framework, we investigated the phylogeography of a wide‐ranging mammal, the long‐tailed vole, Microtus longicaudus. We focused on populations along the North Pacific Coast to refine our understanding of diversification by exploring the potentially compounding roles of multiple glacial refugia and more recent fragmentation of an extensive coastal archipelago. Through a combination of genetic data and species distribution models (SDMs), we found that historical climate variability influenced contemporary genetic structure, with multiple isolated locations of persistence (refugia) producing multiple divergent lineages (Beringian or northern, southeast Alaska or coastal, and southern or continental) during glacial advances. These vole lineages all occur along the North Pacific Coast where the confluence of numerous independent lineages in other species has produced overlapping zones of secondary contact, collectively a suture zone. Finally, we detected high levels of neoendemism due to complex island geography that developed in the last 10,000 years with the rising sea levels of the Holocene.

Highlights

  • Pleistocene glacial–interglacial cycles repeatedly affected divergence and speciation processes at high latitudes in both the Northern (Koch et al 2006; Lee-Yaw et al 2007; Godbout et al 2008) and Southern Hemispheres (Lessa et al 2010)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • Shared alleles were not dependent on geographic proximity, suggesting the lower resolution found in the species tree compared to the more geographically structured mtDNA tree may result from incomplete lineage sorting, rather than admixture (Toews and Brelsford 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Pleistocene glacial–interglacial cycles repeatedly affected divergence and speciation processes at high latitudes in both the Northern (Koch et al 2006; Lee-Yaw et al 2007; Godbout et al 2008) and Southern Hemispheres (Lessa et al 2010). In North America, the Laurentide and Cordilleran ice sheets extended far south during glacial phases (Dyke and Prest 1987; Roberts 1991; Carrara et al 2007), resulting in major distributional changes in temperate and arctic species (Lyons 2003). Populations that colonized de-glaciated regions have signatures of rapid population expansion (Hundertmark et al 2002; Lessa et al 2003; Walker et al 2009), while refugial populations often reflect long-term stability Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

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