LIVING ON THE EDGE: A COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC STUDY OF REFUGIAL AND INSULAR FRAGMENTATION

Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles resulted in population isolation that led to inter- and intra- specific genetic divergence in many North American species. The magnitude of isolation also influenced species response to these climatic changes and set the stage for contemporary gene flow. We ca...

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Main Author: Sawyer, Yadeeh
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: UNM Digital Repository 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/biol_etds/99
https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1098&context=biol_etds
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spelling ftunvnewmexicoir:oai:digitalrepository.unm.edu:biol_etds-1098 2023-05-15T18:48:49+02:00 LIVING ON THE EDGE: A COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC STUDY OF REFUGIAL AND INSULAR FRAGMENTATION Sawyer, Yadeeh 2014-07-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/biol_etds/99 https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1098&context=biol_etds English eng UNM Digital Repository https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/biol_etds/99 https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1098&context=biol_etds Biology ETDs refugia phylogeography endemism islands multilocus Southeast Alaska Yukon post-glacial colonization text 2014 ftunvnewmexicoir 2023-02-02T21:36:15Z Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles resulted in population isolation that led to inter- and intra- specific genetic divergence in many North American species. The magnitude of isolation also influenced species response to these climatic changes and set the stage for contemporary gene flow. We can refine our understanding of species response to historical climate change by identifying regions of ice-free persistence and refugia during glacial maxima, and geographic locations and genetic dynamics of post-glacial secondary contact. This dissertation examines the role of glacial cover, geographic barriers, habitat fragmentation as a result of changes in sea level, and insularity on the contemporary genetic structure of three widespread, co-distributed, and ecologically distinct small mammals across western North America, with emphasis on the Pacific Northwest. Previous work on long-tailed voles (Microtus longicaudus), northwestern deer mice (Peromyscus keeni), and dusky shrews (Sorex monticolus) was used to formulate hypotheses of geographic distribution of genetic variation, timing of divergence, and regions of glacial persistence. This dissertation uses multilocus genetic data and historical climatic conditions to address these hypotheses. I identify regions of glacial persistence, the effects of historical sea levels on island connectivity, and regions of post-glacial secondary contact of divergent lineages within M. longicaudus, P. keeni and S. monticolus. Additionally, I assess levels of endemism for the islands of Southeast Alaska. The collective findings of this dissertation improve our understanding of effects of historical range fragmentation and insularity on contemporary genetic diversity. Text Alaska Yukon UNM Digital Repository (The University of New Mexico) Yukon Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection UNM Digital Repository (The University of New Mexico)
op_collection_id ftunvnewmexicoir
language English
topic refugia
phylogeography
endemism
islands
multilocus
Southeast Alaska
Yukon
post-glacial colonization
spellingShingle refugia
phylogeography
endemism
islands
multilocus
Southeast Alaska
Yukon
post-glacial colonization
Sawyer, Yadeeh
LIVING ON THE EDGE: A COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC STUDY OF REFUGIAL AND INSULAR FRAGMENTATION
topic_facet refugia
phylogeography
endemism
islands
multilocus
Southeast Alaska
Yukon
post-glacial colonization
description Pleistocene glacial-interglacial cycles resulted in population isolation that led to inter- and intra- specific genetic divergence in many North American species. The magnitude of isolation also influenced species response to these climatic changes and set the stage for contemporary gene flow. We can refine our understanding of species response to historical climate change by identifying regions of ice-free persistence and refugia during glacial maxima, and geographic locations and genetic dynamics of post-glacial secondary contact. This dissertation examines the role of glacial cover, geographic barriers, habitat fragmentation as a result of changes in sea level, and insularity on the contemporary genetic structure of three widespread, co-distributed, and ecologically distinct small mammals across western North America, with emphasis on the Pacific Northwest. Previous work on long-tailed voles (Microtus longicaudus), northwestern deer mice (Peromyscus keeni), and dusky shrews (Sorex monticolus) was used to formulate hypotheses of geographic distribution of genetic variation, timing of divergence, and regions of glacial persistence. This dissertation uses multilocus genetic data and historical climatic conditions to address these hypotheses. I identify regions of glacial persistence, the effects of historical sea levels on island connectivity, and regions of post-glacial secondary contact of divergent lineages within M. longicaudus, P. keeni and S. monticolus. Additionally, I assess levels of endemism for the islands of Southeast Alaska. The collective findings of this dissertation improve our understanding of effects of historical range fragmentation and insularity on contemporary genetic diversity.
format Text
author Sawyer, Yadeeh
author_facet Sawyer, Yadeeh
author_sort Sawyer, Yadeeh
title LIVING ON THE EDGE: A COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC STUDY OF REFUGIAL AND INSULAR FRAGMENTATION
title_short LIVING ON THE EDGE: A COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC STUDY OF REFUGIAL AND INSULAR FRAGMENTATION
title_full LIVING ON THE EDGE: A COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC STUDY OF REFUGIAL AND INSULAR FRAGMENTATION
title_fullStr LIVING ON THE EDGE: A COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC STUDY OF REFUGIAL AND INSULAR FRAGMENTATION
title_full_unstemmed LIVING ON THE EDGE: A COMPARATIVE PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC STUDY OF REFUGIAL AND INSULAR FRAGMENTATION
title_sort living on the edge: a comparative phylogeographic study of refugial and insular fragmentation
publisher UNM Digital Repository
publishDate 2014
url https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/biol_etds/99
https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1098&context=biol_etds
geographic Yukon
Pacific
geographic_facet Yukon
Pacific
genre Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Alaska
Yukon
op_source Biology ETDs
op_relation https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/biol_etds/99
https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1098&context=biol_etds
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