North Pacific Opisthobranchs

Some North Pacific species of marine invertebrates have distinct populations that occur separately in the western and eastern Pacific. Several North Pacific species of opisthobranchs have unusually large geographic ranges, including California through Alaska, Siberia and northern Japan. The explanat...

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Main Author: Lindsay, Tabitha
Other Authors: Valdes, Angel, Biological Sciences, Student
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: California State Polytechnic University, Pomona 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138010
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftcalifstateuniv:oai:dspace.calstate.edu:10211.3/138010 2023-05-15T18:48:59+02:00 North Pacific Opisthobranchs Lindsay, Tabitha Valdes, Angel Biological Sciences Student 2015-03-06 http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138010 en_US eng California State Polytechnic University, Pomona SRCWinner CSUSym http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138010 http://www.cpp.edu/~broncoscholar/rightsreserved.html All rights reserved. marine invertebrates opisthobranchs Pacific Ocean Baja California Student Research 2015 ftcalifstateuniv 2022-04-13T11:17:08Z Some North Pacific species of marine invertebrates have distinct populations that occur separately in the western and eastern Pacific. Several North Pacific species of opisthobranchs have unusually large geographic ranges, including California through Alaska, Siberia and northern Japan. The explanation for this wide range is unclear and there are two competing hypotheses: 1) Bidirectional expansion: the ranges of transpacific species during the previous interglacial period/s were split by costal ice formation in the Northern Hemisphere and diverged allopatrically resulting in sister species pairs - these sister species are similar morphologically and are currently classified as the same species, but because they have been separated for at least 100,000 years should be distinguishable using molecular tools. 2) Unidirectional expansion: postglacial expansion northward from refugia in North America allowed species to cross the North Pacific and become established in Siberia and northern Japan - because of the direction of ocean currents, expansion from Asia to North America is less likely. My preliminary data for Diaulula sandiegensis shows that it is not a single species as previously thought, but two distinct species. One species has a range that encompasses the entire north Pacific Ocean while the second is found from the tip of Baja California through British Columbia. Future research will focus on developing a larger genetic library for comparison of these two species and morphological comparison using SEM of the radula and penis. Furthermore, molecular clock dating will be used to determine the timing for the expansion and population history of this species. Other/Unknown Material Alaska Siberia California State University (CSU): DSpace Baja Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection California State University (CSU): DSpace
op_collection_id ftcalifstateuniv
language English
topic marine invertebrates
opisthobranchs
Pacific Ocean
Baja California
spellingShingle marine invertebrates
opisthobranchs
Pacific Ocean
Baja California
Lindsay, Tabitha
North Pacific Opisthobranchs
topic_facet marine invertebrates
opisthobranchs
Pacific Ocean
Baja California
description Some North Pacific species of marine invertebrates have distinct populations that occur separately in the western and eastern Pacific. Several North Pacific species of opisthobranchs have unusually large geographic ranges, including California through Alaska, Siberia and northern Japan. The explanation for this wide range is unclear and there are two competing hypotheses: 1) Bidirectional expansion: the ranges of transpacific species during the previous interglacial period/s were split by costal ice formation in the Northern Hemisphere and diverged allopatrically resulting in sister species pairs - these sister species are similar morphologically and are currently classified as the same species, but because they have been separated for at least 100,000 years should be distinguishable using molecular tools. 2) Unidirectional expansion: postglacial expansion northward from refugia in North America allowed species to cross the North Pacific and become established in Siberia and northern Japan - because of the direction of ocean currents, expansion from Asia to North America is less likely. My preliminary data for Diaulula sandiegensis shows that it is not a single species as previously thought, but two distinct species. One species has a range that encompasses the entire north Pacific Ocean while the second is found from the tip of Baja California through British Columbia. Future research will focus on developing a larger genetic library for comparison of these two species and morphological comparison using SEM of the radula and penis. Furthermore, molecular clock dating will be used to determine the timing for the expansion and population history of this species.
author2 Valdes, Angel
Biological Sciences
Student
format Other/Unknown Material
author Lindsay, Tabitha
author_facet Lindsay, Tabitha
author_sort Lindsay, Tabitha
title North Pacific Opisthobranchs
title_short North Pacific Opisthobranchs
title_full North Pacific Opisthobranchs
title_fullStr North Pacific Opisthobranchs
title_full_unstemmed North Pacific Opisthobranchs
title_sort north pacific opisthobranchs
publisher California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138010
geographic Baja
Pacific
geographic_facet Baja
Pacific
genre Alaska
Siberia
genre_facet Alaska
Siberia
op_relation SRCWinner
CSUSym
http://hdl.handle.net/10211.3/138010
op_rights http://www.cpp.edu/~broncoscholar/rightsreserved.html
All rights reserved.
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