AbstractRange fragmentation poses challenges for species persistence over time and can be caused by both historical and contemporary processes. We combined genomic data, phylogeographical model testing and palaeoclimatic niche modelling to infer the evolutionary history of the Pine Barrens tree frog (Hyla andersonii), a seepage bog specialist, in eastern North America to gain a better understanding of the historical context of its fragmented distribution. We sampled H. andersonii populations across the three disjunct regions of the species range: Alabama/Florida (AF), the Carolinas (CL) and New Jersey (NJ). Phylogenetic relationships within H. andersonii were consistent between the nuclear species tree and mitochondrial analyses, indicating divergence between AF and CL/NJ (Atlantic clade) ~0.9 Mya and divergence of the NJ clade ~0.15 Mya. Several predictions of north-eastern expansion along the Atlantic coast were supported by phylogeographical analyses. Model testing using genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism data and species distribution models both provided evidence for multiple disjunct refugia. This comprehensive phylogeographical study of H. andersonii demonstrates a long history of range fragmentation within an endemic coastal plain species and highlights the influence of historical climate change on the current distribution of species and their genetic diversity.
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