Turbellarian taxonomic database

Record # 20830
Author
Title
Journal
Pongratz N, Storhas M, Carranza S, Michiels NK (2003)
Phylogeography of competing sexual and parthenogenetic forms of a freshwater flatworm: patterns and explanations.
BMC Evolutionary Biology 3:23 www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1471-2148/3/23 [open access]

Abstract / Notes

Background: Models of the maintenance of sex predict that one reproductive strategy, sexual or
parthenogenetic, should outcompete the other. Distribution patterns may reflect the outcome of this
competition as well as the effect of chance and historical events. We review the distribution data of sexual
and parthenogenetic biotypes of the planarian Schmidtea polychroa. Results: S. polychroa lives in allopatry
or sympatry across Europe except for Central and North- Western Europe, where sexual individuals have never
been reported. A phylogenetic relationship between 36 populations based on a 385 bp fragment of the
mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I gene revealed that haplotypes were often similar over large geographic
distances. In North Italian lakes, however, diversity was extreme, with sequence differences of up to 5%
within the same lake in both sexuals and parthenogens. Mixed populations showed "endemic" parthenogenetic
lineages that presumably originated from coexisting sexuals, and distantly related ones that probably result
from colonization by parthenogens independent from sexuals. Conclusions: Parthenogens originated repeatedly
from sexuals, mainly in Italy, but the same may apply to other Mediterranean regions (Spain, Greece). The
degree of divergence between populations suggests that S. polychroa survived the ice ages in separate
ice-free areas in Central, Eastern and Southern Europe and re-colonised Europe after the retreat of the major
glaciers. Combining these results with those based on nuclear markers, the data suggest that repeated
hybridisation between sexuals and parthenogenetic lineages in mixed populations maintains high levels of
genetic diversity in parthenogens. This can explain why parthenogens persist in populations that were
originally sexual. Exclusive parthenogenesis in central and western populations suggests better colonisation
capacity, possibly because of inbreeding costs as well as hybridisation of sexuals with parthenogens.

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