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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Moleculary Systematics and Biogeography of the Galaxidae

Ybazeta, Gustavo 20 June 2014 (has links)
To test competing hypotheses about the relative roles of vicariance and dispersal in the freshwater fishes in Galaxiidae, a phylogenetic framework and a time scale for species divergence were estimated using mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences. Relaxed clock dating revealed that the Galaxiidae originated in Gondwana in the late Cretaceous and thus vicariance cannot be ruled out for the two basal lineages, Galaxiella and Brachygalaxias. These two lineages are ancient relicts that rafted to their present distributions or were fragmented by the separation of Australia from South America via Antarctica. The opening of the Drake passage between South America and Antarctica initiated the proto-Antarctic Circumpolar Current (pACC) and counter-clockwise circulation in the South Atlantic, on which marine stage ancestors could have dispersed to South Africa and New Zealand via Australia during the late Eocene. Thus dispersal explains the disjunct distribution of the clade comprised of G. platei, G. zebratus and Neochanna spp. in South America, South Africa, and Australasia. The narrowing of the Drake passage and collapse of the pACC from about 24-14 Mya likely prevented further contact between South America and South Africa. Tectonic events around the globe produced an anomalous warming event, which along with the uplift of New Zealand provided empty niches and promoted the radiation of Galaxias. Most of the speciation in the other clades occurred during this time. When the Antarctic Circumpolar Current was reactivated at the end of the Mid-Miocene Climatic Optimum (MMCO) about 15–14 Mya, it provided a marine conveyor belt for the dispersal of the ancestor of Galaxias maculatus from Australia to South America, and later to Australia and New Zealand. The integration of divergence times estimated on the phylogeny with ancestral area reconstruction supports an origin in Gondwana and subsequent oceanic dispersal as the explanation for the distribution of the Galaxiidae across the southern continents.
2

Moleculary Systematics and Biogeography of the Galaxidae

Ybazeta, Gustavo 20 June 2014 (has links)
To test competing hypotheses about the relative roles of vicariance and dispersal in the freshwater fishes in Galaxiidae, a phylogenetic framework and a time scale for species divergence were estimated using mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences. Relaxed clock dating revealed that the Galaxiidae originated in Gondwana in the late Cretaceous and thus vicariance cannot be ruled out for the two basal lineages, Galaxiella and Brachygalaxias. These two lineages are ancient relicts that rafted to their present distributions or were fragmented by the separation of Australia from South America via Antarctica. The opening of the Drake passage between South America and Antarctica initiated the proto-Antarctic Circumpolar Current (pACC) and counter-clockwise circulation in the South Atlantic, on which marine stage ancestors could have dispersed to South Africa and New Zealand via Australia during the late Eocene. Thus dispersal explains the disjunct distribution of the clade comprised of G. platei, G. zebratus and Neochanna spp. in South America, South Africa, and Australasia. The narrowing of the Drake passage and collapse of the pACC from about 24-14 Mya likely prevented further contact between South America and South Africa. Tectonic events around the globe produced an anomalous warming event, which along with the uplift of New Zealand provided empty niches and promoted the radiation of Galaxias. Most of the speciation in the other clades occurred during this time. When the Antarctic Circumpolar Current was reactivated at the end of the Mid-Miocene Climatic Optimum (MMCO) about 15–14 Mya, it provided a marine conveyor belt for the dispersal of the ancestor of Galaxias maculatus from Australia to South America, and later to Australia and New Zealand. The integration of divergence times estimated on the phylogeny with ancestral area reconstruction supports an origin in Gondwana and subsequent oceanic dispersal as the explanation for the distribution of the Galaxiidae across the southern continents.

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