Genetic variation in Neotropical butterflies is associated with sampling scale, species distributions, and historical forest dynamics
Prior studies of butterfly diversification in the Neotropics have focused on Amazonia and the tropical Andes, while southern regions of the continent have received little attention. To address the gap in knowledge about the Lepidoptera of temperate South America, we analyzed over 3,000 specimens rep...
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Zusammenfassung: | Prior studies of butterfly diversification in the Neotropics have focused
on Amazonia and the tropical Andes, while southern regions of the
continent have received little attention. To address the gap in knowledge
about the Lepidoptera of temperate South America, we analyzed over 3,000
specimens representing nearly 500 species from Argentina for a segment of
the mitochondrial COI gene. Representing 42% of the country’s butterfly
fauna, collections targeted species from the Atlantic and Andean forests,
biodiversity hotspots that were previously connected but are now isolated.
We assessed COI effectiveness for species discrimination and
identification and how its performance was affected by geographic
distances and taxon coverage. COI data also allowed to study patterns of
genetic variation across Argentina, particularly between populations in
the Atlantic and Andean forests. Our results show that COI discriminates
species well, but that identification success is reduced on average by
~20% as spatial and taxonomic coverage rises. We also found that levels of
genetic variation are associated with species’ spatial distribution type,
a pattern which might reflect differences in their dispersal and
colonization abilities. In particular, intraspecific distance between
populations in the Atlantic and Andean forests was significantly higher in
species with disjunct distributions than in those with a continuous range.
All splits between lineages in these forests dated to the Pleistocene, but
divergence dates varied considerably, suggesting that historical
connections between the Atlantic and Andean forests have differentially
affected their shared butterfly fauna. Our study supports the fact that
large-scale assessments of mitochondrial DNA variation are a powerful tool
for evolutionary studies. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.rfj6q5790 |