

Author: Garrick Ryan C. Rowell David M. Sunnucks Paul
Publisher: MDPI
E-ISSN: 2075-4450|3|1|270-294
ISSN: 2075-4450
Source: Insects, Vol.3, Iss.1, 2012-02, pp. : 270-294
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Abstract
The interaction between physiogeographic landscape context and certain life history characteristics, particularly dispersal ability, can generate predictable outcomes for how species responded to Pleistocene (and earlier) climatic changes. Furthermore, the extent to which impacts of past landscape-level changes ‘scale-up’ to whole communities has begun to be addressed via comparative phylogeographic analyses of co-distributed species. Here we present an overview of a body of research on flightless low-mobility forest invertebrates, focusing on two springtails and two terrestrial flatworms, from Tallaganda on the Great Dividing Range of south-eastern Australia. These species are distantly-related, and represent contrasting trophic levels (
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