Reconsidering connectivity in the sub-Antarctic
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Moon, Katherine
Chown, Steven
Fraser, Ceridwen
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Cambridge University Press
Abstract
Extreme and remote environments provide useful settings to test ideas about the ecological and evolutionary drivers
of biological diversity. In the sub-Antarctic, isolation by geographic, geological and glaciological processes has long
been thought to underpin patterns in the region’s terrestrial and marine diversity. Molecular studies using increasingly
high-resolution data are, however, challenging this perspective, demonstrating that many taxa disperse among distant
sub-Antarctic landmasses. Here, we reconsider connectivity in the sub-Antarctic region, identifying which taxa are
relatively isolated, which are well connected, and the scales across which this connectivity occurs in both terrestrial and
marine systems. Although many organisms show evidence of occasional long-distance, trans-oceanic dispersal, these
events are often insufficient to maintain gene flow across the region. Species that do show evidence of connectivity
across large distances include both active dispersers and more sedentary species. Overall, connectivity patterns in the
sub-Antarctic at intra- and inter-island scales are highly complex, influenced by life-history traits and local dynamics
such as relative dispersal capacity and propagule pressure, natal philopatry, feeding associations, the extent of human
exploitation, past climate cycles, contemporary climate, and physical barriers to movement. An increasing use of
molecular data – particularly genomic data sets that can reveal fine-scale patterns – and more effective international
collaboration and communication that facilitates integration of data from across the sub-Antarctic, are providing fresh
insights into the processes driving patterns of diversity in the region. These insights offer a platform for assessing the
ways in which changing dispersal mechanisms, such as through increasing human activity and changes to wind and
ocean circulation, may alter sub-Antarctic biodiversity patterns in the future.
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Biological Reviews
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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