Drainage Reorganization and Intraspecific Genetic Diversity of Riverine
Fish: Insights from the Ligurian Alps and Northern Apennines via
Environmental DNA Metabarcoding
Abstract
Mountain building reorganizes drainage networks, influencing riverine
biodiversity. Northern Italy offers a natural experiment in the impact
of tectonic and geomorphic processes on aquatic species distributions.
We combined geomorphic analysis with environmental DNA from rivers to
assess the influence of tectonically driven drainage reorganization on
genetic diversity, targeting an endemic fish species, Telestes
muticellus (A. Risso, 1827). In the Northern Apennines, horizontal
shortening and topographic advection in an orogenic wedge have been
hypothesized as leading to river capture and drainage divide migration.
In addition, slab rollback has produced a spatial transition from
contraction to extension, which is more pronounced from north to south,
with normal faulting producing range-parallel drainage only in the
southern regions. In contrast, the adjacent Ligurian Alps are a remnant
of the Alpine orogen with little modern deformation. We found distinct
zones of geomorphic characteristics from north to south, including
divide asymmetry and frequency of range-parallel drainage. Analysis of
DNA sequences shows cross-divide assemblage characteristics that
correlate with the geomorphic zonation. The Northern Apennines show
higher values of the directional measures of assemblage change gain,
loss, and turnover; the Ligurian Alps show higher values of overlap and
nestedness. There is a positive correlation between divide asymmetry and
genetic distance, and gain, loss, and turnover of DNA sequences from
Adriatic to Ligurian sites; there is a negative correlation with overlap
and nestedness. Since the species is confined to freshwater
environments, tectonically driven drainage reorganization is one of the
only mechanisms that can explain its spatial genetic differentiation.