학술논문

Did Vicariance Mold Phenotypes of Western North American Fishes? Evidence from Gila River Cyprinids
Document Type
research-article
Source
Evolution, 1999 Feb 01. 53(1), 238-246.
Subject
Fishes
Genus Gila
Geologic History
Hydrography
Mantel Test
Vicariance
Western North America
Freshwater fishes
Evolution
River basins
Geography
United States history
Phenotypes
Ecological genetics
Biogeography
Genetic variation
Animal morphology
Language
English
ISSN
00143820
15585646
Abstract
Pairwise, two- and three-way Mantel tests were used to evaluate a null hypothesis of no significant covariation when morphological features of three cyprinid fish taxa of the genus Gila were compared. Tests involved ecological conditions and past and present hydrography in the Gila River Basin of western North America. A vicariance hypothesis was the only model statistically proficient in explaining diversity of fish phenotypes. Of paleohydrographic reconstructions compared, those of the mid-Miocene and Pliocene epochs were significantly associated with present-day distributions of phenotypes. Of these, the Pliocene was paramount.