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1 August 2002 EXAMINING GENETIC STRUCTURE IN A BOGUS YUCCA MOTH: A SEQUENTIAL APPROACH TO PHYLOGEOGRAPHY
David M. Althoff, Olle Pellmyr
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Abstract

Understanding the phylogeography of a species requires not only elucidating patterns of genetic structure among populations, but also identifying the possible evolutionary events creating that structure. The use of a single phylogeographic test or analysis, however, usually provides a picture of genetic structure without revealing the possible underlying evolutionary causes. We used current analytical techniques in a sequential approach to examine genetic structure and its underlying causes in the bogus yucca moth Prodoxus decipiens (Lepidoptera: Prodoxidae). Both historical biogeography and recent human transplantations of the moth's host plants provided a priori expectations of the pattern of genetic structure and its underlying causes. We evaluated these expectations by using a progression of phylogenetic, demographic, and population genetic analyses of mtDNA sequence data from 476 individuals distributed across 25 populations that encompassed the range of P. decipiens. The combination of these analyses revealed that much of the genetic structure has evolved more recently than suggested by historical biogeography, has been influenced by changes in demography, and can be best explained by long distance dispersal and isolation by distance. We suggest that performing a suite of analyses that focus on different temporal scales may be an effective approach to investigating the patterns and causes of genetic structure within species.

David M. Althoff and Olle Pellmyr "EXAMINING GENETIC STRUCTURE IN A BOGUS YUCCA MOTH: A SEQUENTIAL APPROACH TO PHYLOGEOGRAPHY," Evolution 56(8), 1632-1643, (1 August 2002). https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2002)056[1632:EGSIAB]2.0.CO;2
Received: 19 February 2002; Accepted: 23 May 2002; Published: 1 August 2002
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KEYWORDS
biogeography
isolation by distance
mismatch
nested clade
population structure
yucca moth
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