BRIDGING THE “BEECH-GAP”: NEW ZEALAND INVERTEBRATE PHYLOGEOGRAPHY IMPLICATES PLEISTOCENE GLACIATION AND PLIOCENE ISOLATION
Abstract
The existence of areas of lower endemism and disjunction of New Zealand biota is typified byNothofagus beech trees (hence ''beech-gap'') and have been attributed to a variety of causes ranging from ancient fault-mediated displacement (20-25 million years ago) to Pleistocene glacial extirpation (,1.8 million years ago). We used cytochrome oxidase I and 12S mtDNA sequence data from a suite of endemic invertebrates to explore phylogeographic depth...
Paper Details
Title
BRIDGING THE “BEECH-GAP”: NEW ZEALAND INVERTEBRATE PHYLOGEOGRAPHY IMPLICATES PLEISTOCENE GLACIATION AND PLIOCENE ISOLATION
Published Date
Nov 1, 2001
Journal
Volume
55
Issue
11
Pages
2170 - 2180
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