4.5 Article

Population structure of a widespread bat (Tadarida brasiliensis) in an island system

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 7, Issue 19, Pages 7585-7598

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.3233

Keywords

Bahamas; Caribbean; Chiroptera; dispersal; Molossidae; West Indies

Funding

  1. Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Fund
  2. American Museum of Natural History
  3. Brian Riewald Memorial Fund
  4. John Paul Olowo Memorial Fund
  5. University of Florida Department of Biology
  6. University Women's Club of the University of Florida
  7. Theodore Roosevelt Postdoctoral Fellowship

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Dispersal is a driving factor in the creation and maintenance of biodiversity, yet little is known about the effects of habitat variation and geography on dispersal and population connectivity in most mammalian groups. Bats of the family Molossidae are fast-flying mammals thought to have potentially high dispersal ability, and recent studies have indicated gene flow across hundreds of kilometers in continental North American populations of the Brazilian free-tailed bat, Tadarida brasiliensis. We examined the population genetics, phylogeography, and morphology of this species in Florida and across islands of The Bahamas, which are part of an island archipelago in the West Indies. Previous studies indicate that bats in the family Phyllostomidae, which are possibly less mobile than members of the family Molossidae, exhibit population structuring across The Bahamas. We hypothesized that T.brasiliensis would show high population connectivity throughout the islands and that T.brasiliensis would show higher connectivity than two species of phyllostomid bats that have been previously examined in The Bahamas. Contrary to our predictions, T.brasiliensis shows high population structure between two groups of islands in The Bahamas, similar to the structure exhibited by one species of phyllostomid bat. Phylogenetic and morphological analyses suggest that this structure may be the result of ancient divergence between two populations of T.brasiliensis that subsequently came into contact in The Bahamas. Our findings additionally suggest that there may be cryptic species within T.brasiliensis in The Bahamas and the West Indies more broadly.

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