Abstract

Highly specialized obligatory cave beetles endemic to the French Pyrenees offer an opportunity to investigate the relative importance of environmental conditions and ecological characteristics on the organization of genetic variability, to describe the genetic structure of populations, and to assess the extent of gene flow between local populations in relation to geologic structure. Twenty-three geographically close populations of the beetle Speonomus hydrophilus occurring both in caves (reduced fluctuations in many abiotic parameters) and under the deepest layer of soil in mountains (more exposed to climatic variations) were studied. Significant genetic differentiation at 17 allozyme loci was found among populations in close proximity, as well as among those from distant parts of range. On a larger scale, genetic differences among populations appear to result from low dispersal rates between populations. The spatial patterning observed suggests that allozyme frequencies are not responding to environmentally controlled selection. Substantial genetic divergence (F(ST) = 0.112) occurred throughout the range, with important variation in levels of genetic variability (H: 0.065-0.184) among populations. A significant level of substructuring has occurred among the populations with four major geographic areas of similarity indicated. The substructuring of the species into regions suggests an influence of paleoclimatic gradient and paleoenvironment on the population's genetic structure. Also, founder effect and reduced gene flow appear to have influenced populations in the southeastern portion of the range.

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