Data from: Mitochondrial lineage sorting in action – historical biogeography of the Hyles euphorbiae complex (Sphingidae, Lepidoptera) in Italy
Background: Mitochondrial genes are among the most commonly used markers in studies of species’ phylogeography and to draw conclusions about taxonomy. The Hyles euphorbiae complex (HEC) comprises six distinct mitochondrial lineages in the Mediterranean region, of which one exhibits a cryptic disjunc...
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Mitochondrial genes are among the most commonly used markers
in studies of species’ phylogeography and to draw conclusions about
taxonomy. The Hyles euphorbiae complex (HEC) comprises six distinct
mitochondrial lineages in the Mediterranean region, of which one exhibits
a cryptic disjunct distribution. The predominant mitochondrial lineage in
most of Europe, euphorbiae, is also present on Malta; however, it is
nowadays strangely absent from Southern Italy and Sicily, where it is
replaced by 'italica'. A separate biological entity in Italy is
further corroborated by larval colour patterns with a congruent, confined
suture zone along the Northern Apennines. By means of historic DNA
extracted from museum specimens, we aimed to investigate the evolution of
the mitochondrial demographic structure of the HEC in Italy and Malta
throughout the Twentieth Century. Results: At the beginning of the
Twentieth Century, the European mainland lineages were also present at a
moderate frequency in Southern Italy and Sicily. The proportion of
'italica' then steadily increased in this area from below 60
percent to near fixation in about 120 years. Thus, geographical sorting of
mitochondrial lineages in the HEC was not as complete then as the current
demography suggests. The pattern of an integral 'italica' core
region and a disjunct euphorbiae distribution evolved very recently. To
explain these strong demographic changes, we propose genetic drift due to
anthropogenic habitat loss and fragmentation in combination with an impact
from recent climate warming that favoured the spreading of the potentially
better adapted 'italica' populations. Conclusions: The pattern
of geographically separated mitochondrial lineages is commonly interpreted
as representing long term separated entities. However, our results
indicate that such a pattern can emerge surprisingly quickly, even in a
widespread and rather common taxon. We thus caution against drawing hasty
taxonomic conclusions from biogeographical patterns of mitochondrial
markers derived from modern sampling alone. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1g98b |