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Articles

Islands in ice: isolated populations of Cryptopygus sverdrupi (Collembola) among nunataks in the Sør Rondane Mountains, Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica

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Pages 169-177 | Received 19 May 2014, Accepted 24 May 2014, Published online: 07 Jul 2014
 

Abstract

Molecular variation among Antarctic Collembola has been well appreciated over the last decade. The majority of studies have focussed on the Transantarctic Mountains and Antarctic Peninsula, and more recently Dronning Maud Land, which now accounts for all known continental species. Within most species, mean mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence divergence has not been more than around 2%, but in 2010 far greater levels of infraspecific sequence divergence (9.2–10.9%) were discovered in three species: Friesea grisea (10.2%), Gressittacantha terranova (10.4%) and Cryptopygus antarcticus (9.2%). Here, we present the first phylogeographic study on Cryptopygus sverdrupi from Dronning Maud Land. We found that mtDNA COI and 16S haplotypes clustered into two lineages with a mean COI sequence divergence of around 7.1%. The mixing of haplotypes between nearby nunataks separated by up to 15 km revealed support for ongoing (but rare) dispersal, although a single site, the most geographically isolated (by 40–58 km) was also the most genetically divergent. These levels of sequence divergence indicate persistence of biota throughout the Miocene and Pliocene isolated in glacial refugia. Expanding sampling of C. sverdrupi from additional ice-free refugia throughout Dronning Maud Land will be important to further our understanding of the evolutionary processes that have influenced the Antarctic continent, its landscape and biota.

Acknowledgements

We are extremely grateful to the funding and logistics from the Belgian 2009 BELDIVA Expedition and also thank the Stations leaders and assistants who supported this fieldwork, and in particular to Annick Wilmotte. This paper contributes to ongoing research on Antarctic invertebrates through the Australian Antarctic Division (AAS 2355). We thank Vanessa Reid (Managing Editor) and Peter Convey for their input into improving the manuscript.

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