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Phylogeograpy of Aphanicercella cassida (Plecoptera : Notonemourida) : cryptic speciation?

Stoneflies (Plecoptera) in South Africa are limited to cool pristine mountain streams. This provides them with very limited habitat in which to survive. The species of stonefly studied in this project (Aphanicercella cassida) has a very wide distribution unlike most other species which have a limite...

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Main Author: Van Alphen-Stahl, Jonathan
Other Authors: Hedderson, Terry A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Van Alphen-Stahl, Jonathan
author2 Hedderson, Terry A
author_browse Hedderson, Terry A
Van Alphen-Stahl, Jonathan
author_facet Hedderson, Terry A
Van Alphen-Stahl, Jonathan
author_sort Van Alphen-Stahl, Jonathan
collection Thesis
description Stoneflies (Plecoptera) in South Africa are limited to cool pristine mountain streams. This provides them with very limited habitat in which to survive. The species of stonefly studied in this project (Aphanicercella cassida) has a very wide distribution unlike most other species which have a limited range. Of particular interest is a population in Mpumalanga (north of South Africa) which is very disjunct from the other populations of A. cassida found widely in the southwestern Cape. Despite this large geographic distance the insects appear to be morphologically identical to one another. It is believed that there is limited or no gene flow between the northern and southern populations as stoneflies are poor fliers. Molecular analysis of the cytochrome oxidase I gene in the mitochondrial DNA was analysed to see if any genetic differentiation was occurring inspite of the morphological homogeneity. A 557 base pair region was compared across three populations of A. cassida one in Mpumalanga and two in the southwestern Cape. Two congeneric species, A. bullata and A. scutata, were used as outgroups. The findings of this study were quite dramatic. The northern population is extremely different from the southern populations at the molecular level. There is more variation between the two populations of A. cassida than between the two outgroup species and the split between the two disjunct populations displays evidence of an ancient vicariance event. This finding definitely warrants further investigation into whether the population of A. cassida in Mpumalanga is a cryptic species. More sampling has to be done within the studied populations and more populations should be added to the analysis before any definite decision can be made regarding this fascinating emergence of possible cryptic species in South African stoneflies.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:47:05.919Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25612 Phylogeograpy of Aphanicercella cassida (Plecoptera : Notonemourida) : cryptic speciation? Van Alphen-Stahl, Jonathan Hedderson, Terry A Plecoptera Stoneflies (Plecoptera) in South Africa are limited to cool pristine mountain streams. This provides them with very limited habitat in which to survive. The species of stonefly studied in this project (Aphanicercella cassida) has a very wide distribution unlike most other species which have a limited range. Of particular interest is a population in Mpumalanga (north of South Africa) which is very disjunct from the other populations of A. cassida found widely in the southwestern Cape. Despite this large geographic distance the insects appear to be morphologically identical to one another. It is believed that there is limited or no gene flow between the northern and southern populations as stoneflies are poor fliers. Molecular analysis of the cytochrome oxidase I gene in the mitochondrial DNA was analysed to see if any genetic differentiation was occurring inspite of the morphological homogeneity. A 557 base pair region was compared across three populations of A. cassida one in Mpumalanga and two in the southwestern Cape. Two congeneric species, A. bullata and A. scutata, were used as outgroups. The findings of this study were quite dramatic. The northern population is extremely different from the southern populations at the molecular level. There is more variation between the two populations of A. cassida than between the two outgroup species and the split between the two disjunct populations displays evidence of an ancient vicariance event. This finding definitely warrants further investigation into whether the population of A. cassida in Mpumalanga is a cryptic species. More sampling has to be done within the studied populations and more populations should be added to the analysis before any definite decision can be made regarding this fascinating emergence of possible cryptic species in South African stoneflies. 2017-10-12T08:29:18Z 2017-10-12T08:29:18Z 2002 2017-02-22T12:50:55Z Bachelor Thesis Honours BSc (Hons) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25612 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Plecoptera
Van Alphen-Stahl, Jonathan
Phylogeograpy of Aphanicercella cassida (Plecoptera : Notonemourida) : cryptic speciation?
thesis_degree_str Bachelor's / Honours
title Phylogeograpy of Aphanicercella cassida (Plecoptera : Notonemourida) : cryptic speciation?
title_full Phylogeograpy of Aphanicercella cassida (Plecoptera : Notonemourida) : cryptic speciation?
title_fullStr Phylogeograpy of Aphanicercella cassida (Plecoptera : Notonemourida) : cryptic speciation?
title_full_unstemmed Phylogeograpy of Aphanicercella cassida (Plecoptera : Notonemourida) : cryptic speciation?
title_short Phylogeograpy of Aphanicercella cassida (Plecoptera : Notonemourida) : cryptic speciation?
title_sort phylogeograpy of aphanicercella cassida plecoptera notonemourida cryptic speciation
topic Plecoptera
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25612
work_keys_str_mv AT vanalphenstahljonathan phylogeograpyofaphanicercellacassidaplecopteranotonemouridacrypticspeciation