Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dspace.mnau.edu.ua/jspui/handle/123456789/14271
Title: Reconstructed historical distribution and phylogeography unravels non-steppic origin of caucasotachea vindobonensis (gastropoda: Helicidae)
Authors: Kajtoch, Łukasz
Davison, Angus
Grindon, Adele
Deli, Tamás
Sramkó, Gábor
Gwardjan, Mariusz
Kramarenko, Sergei
Крамаренко, Сергій Сергійович
Mierzwa-Szymkowiak, Dominika
Ruta, Rafał
Ścibior, Radosław
Pál Tóth, János
Wade, Chris
Kolasa, Michał
Egorov, Roman V.
Fehér, Zoltán
Keywords: Demography
Holocene
Mollusca
Niche modeling
Pleistocene
Steppe
Balkans
Carpathians
Sudetes
Gastropoda
Helicidae
Hexapoda
Invertebrata
Mollusca
anthropogenic effect
colonization
demography
ecological modeling
geographical distribution
historical perspective
Holocene
mollusc
niche
phylogeography
Pleistocene
provenance
reconstruction
snail
steppe
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals Polish Academy of Sciences
Citation: Kajtoch, Ł., Davison, A., Grindon, A., Deli, T., Sramkó, G., Gwardjan, M., . . . Fehér, Z. (2017). Reconstructed historical distribution and phylogeography unravels non-steppic origin of caucasotachea vindobonensis (gastropoda: Helicidae) // Organisms Diversity and Evolution, 17(3), 679-692. doi:10.1007/s13127-017-0337-3
Abstract: Existing data on the phylogeography of European taxa of steppic provenance suggests that species were widely distributed during glacial periods but underwent range contraction and fragmentation during interglacials into “warm-stage refugia.” Among the steppe-related invertebrates that have been examined, the majority has been insects, but data on the phylogeography of snails is wholly missing. To begin to fill this gap, phylogeographic and niche modeling studies on the presumed steppic snail Caucasotachea vindobonensis were conducted. Surprisingly, reconstruction of ancestral areas suggests that extant C. vindobonensis probably originated in the Balkans and survived there during the Late Pleistocene glaciations, with a more recent colonization of the Carpatho-Pannonian and the Ponto-Caspian regions. In the Holocene, C. vindobonensis colonized between the Sudetes and the Carpathians to the north, where its recent and current distribution may have been facilitated by anthropogenic translocations. Together, these data suggest a possible non-steppic origin of C. vindobonensis. Further investigation may reveal the extent to which the steppic snail assemblages consist partly of Holocene newcomers. © 2017, The Author(s).
URI: https://dspace.mnau.edu.ua/jspui/handle/123456789/14271
Appears in Collections:Публікації науково-педагогічних працівників МНАУ у БД Scopus
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