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Journal of Undergraduate Research

Keywords

population structure, cuttlefish sepia officinalis, North Atlantic-Mediterranean

College

Life Sciences

Department

Microbiology and Molecular Biology

Abstract

An understanding of the relatedness of a population of organisms, or their phylogeny, combined with knowledge of that population’s geographical distribution, can illuminate which geographic forces and events may have played a role in forming the “family tree” of that organism. Therefore past speciation events and the incipient stages of speciation can be discerned when phylogenetic and geographic information is merged. This process, broadly known as the practice of phylogeography or biogeography, is important because it permits researchers to visualize the evolutionary interplay between environment and organism. Additionally, an understanding of an organism’s population structure, or family tree, enables scientists and conservation management professionals to make predictions about which geographic locations need protection, or which can withstand further exploitation, while still preserving lineages of a given organism.

Included in

Microbiology Commons

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