학술논문

Small-scale biogeographical patterns in some groundwater Crustacea, the syncarid, Parabathynellidae
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Biodiversity and Conservation. Oct, 2006, Vol. 15 Issue 11, p3527, 15 p.
Subject
Water, Underground -- Analysis
Language
English
ISSN
0960-3115
Abstract
An analysis was made of the micro-distribution patterns of five phylogenetically closely related species belonging to the genus Iberobathynella, a group of subterranean aquatic crustaceans (Syncarida, Parabathynellidae). The two-step model of colonization and speciation seems to provide a valid explanation for the current distribution of a large number of stygobiontic taxa of marine origin (thalassoid). However, with respect to the Iberobathynella, only the colonization of the subterranean environment at the mesoscale level can be explained. The second phase of the model, marine regression, can only explain the colonization of the region by the ancestor; the subsequent evolution and speciation at a smaller scale remain to be explained. Local geological constraints -- Upper Triassic gypsiferous mudstone deposits plus faults and thrusting linked to the Alpine Orogeny -- are responsible for the appearance of local palaeogeographic phenomena. These may have been the vicariant processes responsible for the geographical and genetic isolation of the ancestral populations of this group, which eventually led to clade divergence. Together with small-scale passive dispersion (11 dispersal events) and local extinction, these processes could be responsible for the current distribution of the five sister taxa inhabiting the caves of the Sierra de la Collada, Spain. A plausible palaeogeographical scenario is offered to explain their present distribution, that clearly came about through chance events.