Glaciers are inhabited by various cryophilic organisms ranging from single celled to multicellular, like Tardigrada (water bears). Owing to their scattered distribution, glaciers represent extremely fragmented habitats, and it remains unclear how their inhabitants survive and disperse among such isolated patches. This study investigates the biogeography of the tardigrade genus Cryoconicus, whose distribution, population stability, and interregional connectivity are examined by screening the collections from ~ 60 glaciers worldwide and by a phylogeographic analysis. We found that two Cryoconicus species occur at low densities on two Arctic glaciers in Svalbard, far from their previously reported Antarctic and Central Asian ranges. Screening of worldwide databases and DNA metabarcoding indicated that these species are absent or rare in the intermediate areas, suggesting large disjunctions in their ranges. In particular, the genetic data and multiyear resampling showed that Cryoconicus kaczmareki established a stable population on the Ebba Glacier (Svalbard), which has been isolated from its Asian core range since before the last glacial maximum. Our findings suggest that glacial invertebrates may possess wide yet largely disjunctive ranges. Interpolar- or intercontinental-scale movements of cryophilic meiofauna may occur, but migration connectivity is not sufficient to mitigate the differentiation of the local population. Revealed biogeographic patterns further demonstrate that inhabitants of extreme environments may establish isolated and highly fragmented populations that persist long term, even if at very low densitie

Cryophilic Tardigrada have disjunct and bipolar distribution and establish long-term stable, low-density demes / K. Zawierucha, E.S. Kasparova, S. Mcinnes, J. Buda, R. Ambrosini, M. Devetter, G.F. Ficetola, A. Franzetti, N. Takeuchi, P. Horna, T.N. Jaromerska, M. Ono, M. Sabacka, K. Janko. - In: POLAR BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0722-4060. - 46:10(2023), pp. 1011-1027. [10.1007/s00300-023-03170-4]

Cryophilic Tardigrada have disjunct and bipolar distribution and establish long-term stable, low-density demes

R. Ambrosini;G.F. Ficetola;
2023

Abstract

Glaciers are inhabited by various cryophilic organisms ranging from single celled to multicellular, like Tardigrada (water bears). Owing to their scattered distribution, glaciers represent extremely fragmented habitats, and it remains unclear how their inhabitants survive and disperse among such isolated patches. This study investigates the biogeography of the tardigrade genus Cryoconicus, whose distribution, population stability, and interregional connectivity are examined by screening the collections from ~ 60 glaciers worldwide and by a phylogeographic analysis. We found that two Cryoconicus species occur at low densities on two Arctic glaciers in Svalbard, far from their previously reported Antarctic and Central Asian ranges. Screening of worldwide databases and DNA metabarcoding indicated that these species are absent or rare in the intermediate areas, suggesting large disjunctions in their ranges. In particular, the genetic data and multiyear resampling showed that Cryoconicus kaczmareki established a stable population on the Ebba Glacier (Svalbard), which has been isolated from its Asian core range since before the last glacial maximum. Our findings suggest that glacial invertebrates may possess wide yet largely disjunctive ranges. Interpolar- or intercontinental-scale movements of cryophilic meiofauna may occur, but migration connectivity is not sufficient to mitigate the differentiation of the local population. Revealed biogeographic patterns further demonstrate that inhabitants of extreme environments may establish isolated and highly fragmented populations that persist long term, even if at very low densitie
English
Biogeography; Cryoconite holes; Disjunct distribution; Glaciers; Long-range dispersal; Tardigrada
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Settore BIO/07 - Ecologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
Goal 13: Climate action
Goal 14: Life below water
Goal 15: Life on land
   Reconstructing community dynamics and ecosystem functioning after glacial retreat (IceCommunities)
   IceCommunities
   EUROPEAN COMMISSION
   H2020
   772284
2023
Springer Nature
46
10
1011
1027
17
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Cryophilic Tardigrada have disjunct and bipolar distribution and establish long-term stable, low-density demes / K. Zawierucha, E.S. Kasparova, S. Mcinnes, J. Buda, R. Ambrosini, M. Devetter, G.F. Ficetola, A. Franzetti, N. Takeuchi, P. Horna, T.N. Jaromerska, M. Ono, M. Sabacka, K. Janko. - In: POLAR BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0722-4060. - 46:10(2023), pp. 1011-1027. [10.1007/s00300-023-03170-4]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
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Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
K. Zawierucha, E.S. Kasparova, S. Mcinnes, J. Buda, R. Ambrosini, M. Devetter, G.F. Ficetola, A. Franzetti, N. Takeuchi, P. Horna, T.N. Jaromerska, M....espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1022411
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