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Abstract
Understanding the factors that have shaped the current distributions and diversity of species is a central and longstanding aim of evolutionary biology. The recent inclusion of genomic data into phylogeographic studies has dramatically improved our understanding in organisms where evolutionary relationships have been challenging to infer. We used whole-genome sequences to study the phylogeography of the intertidal snail Littorina saxatilis, which has successfully colonized and diversified across a broad range of coastal environments in the Northern Hemisphere amid repeated cycles of glaciation. Building on past studies based on short DNA sequences, we used genome-wide data to provide a clearer picture of the relationships among samples spanning most of the species natural range. Our results confirm the trans-Atlantic colonization of North America from Europe, and have allowed us to identify rough locations of glacial refugia and to infer likely routes of colonization within Europe. We also investigated the signals in different datasets to account for the effects of genomic architecture and non-neutral evolution, which provides new insights about diversification of four ecotypes of L. saxatilis (the crab, wave, barnacle, and brackish ecotypes) at different spatial scales. Overall, we provide a much clearer picture of the biogeography of L. saxatilis, providing a foundation for more detailed phylogenomic and demographic studies.
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1 Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, School of Biosciences, University of Sheffield , S10 2TN Sheffield , UK
2 Centro de Investigación Mariña, Departamento de Bioquímica, Genética e Inmunología, Universidade de Vigo , 36310 Vigo , Spain
3 Sheffield Children’s NHS Foundation Trust , Clarkson St, Broomhall, Sheffield S10 2TH , UK
4 CIBIO, Centro de Investigação em Biodiversidade e Recursos Genéticos, InBIO Laboratório Associado, Campus de Vairão, Universidade do Porto , 4485-661 Vairão , Portugal
5 Institute of Cytology Russian Academy of Sciences , St. Petersburg, 194064 , Russia
6 Biology Department, East Carolina University , Greenville, NC 27858 , USA
7 Faculty of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Iceland , Reykjavík 107 , Iceland
8 CNRS & Sorbonne Université, Station Biologique de Roscoff , Roscoff 29680 , France
9 Section for Evolutionary Genomics, GLOBE Institute, University of Copenhagen , DK-1353 Copenhagen , Denmark
10 School of Biology, University of Leeds , Leeds LS2 9JT , UK
11 Institute of Science and Technology Austria (IST Austria) , 3400 Klosterneuburg , Austria
12 Department of Marine Sciences, Tjärnö, University of Gothenburg , 405 30 Strömstad , Sweden