Abstract

Repeated recolonization of freshwater environments following Pleistocene glaciations has played a major role in the evolution and adaptation of anadromous taxa. Located at the western fringe of Europe, Ireland and Britain were likely recolonized rapidly by anadromous fishes from the North Atlantic following the last glacial maximum (LGM). While the presence of unique mitochondrial haplotypes in Ireland suggests that a cryptic northern refugium may have played a role in recolonization, no explicit test of this hypothesis has been conducted. The three-spined stickleback is native and ubiquitous to aquatic ecosystems throughout Ireland, making it an excellent model species with which to examine the biogeographical history of anadromous fishes in the region. We used mitochondrial and microsatellite markers to examine the presence of divergent evolutionary lineages and to assess broad-scale patterns of geographical clustering among postglacially isolated populations. Our results confirm that Ireland is a region of secondary contact for divergent mitochondrial lineages and that endemic haplotypes occur in populations in Central and Southern Ireland. To test whether a putative Irish lineage arose from a cryptic Irish refugium, we used approximate Bayesian computation (ABC). However, we found no support for this hypothesis. Instead, the Irish lineage likely diverged from the European lineage as a result of postglacial isolation of freshwater populations by rising sea levels. These findings emphasize the need to rigorously test biogeographical hypothesis and contribute further evidence that postglacial processes may have shaped genetic diversity in temperate fauna.

Highlights

  • Repeated recolonization of freshwater environments after Pleistocene glaciations has played a major role in shaping the evolution and distribution of numerous anadromous taxa (Hewitt 1996, 2001; Avise 2000)

  • The results of our study suggest that rapid deglaciation at the southern margin of the British–Irish Ice Sheet shaped the recolonization of Ireland by anadromous fish species, establishing it as a secondary contact zone and likely facilitating the evolution of unique genetic diversity

  • Regional variation in glacial history has shaped the distribution of genetic diversity across Northern Europe as a result of postglacial recolonization

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Summary

Introduction

Repeated recolonization of freshwater environments after Pleistocene glaciations has played a major role in shaping the evolution and distribution of numerous anadromous taxa (Hewitt 1996, 2001; Avise 2000). Located at the western fringe of Northern Europe, Ireland is likely to have been one of the first regions recolonized by anadromous species from the North Atlantic, following ice retreat after the last glacial maximum (LGM). The region is a zone of secondary contact for divergent evolutionary lineages in these species, that is, genetically divergent monophyletic units arising from allopatry (Consuegra et al 2002; Jordan et al 2005; McKeown et al 2010). The presence of divergent mitochondrial haplotypes, absent from populations in both Britain and Northern Europe, suggests that postglacial recolonization of some species may have occurred from a cryptic refugium

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