articleScienceJul 28, 2003Closed access

Geographic Barriers Isolate Endemic Populations of Hyperthermophilic Archaea

University of Cincinnati · University of California, Berkeley

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Barriers to dispersal between populations allow them to diverge through local adaptation or random genetic drift. High-resolution multilocus sequence analysis revealed that, on a global scale, populations of hyperthermophilic microorganisms are isolated from one another by geographic barriers and have diverged over the course of their recent evolutionary history. The identification of a biogeographic pattern in the archaeon Sulfolobus challenges the current model of microbial biodiversity in which unrestricted dispersal constrains the development of global species richness.

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Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biological dispersal
  • Archaea
  • Biodiversity
  • Biology
  • Ecology
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Species richness
  • Biogeography
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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