Nine species of tiger beetle (Cicindelidae) occur in coastal habitats in Japan, with two to four species co‐occurring at each locality. To examine the patterns of coexistence and geographical distribution, the mandible size of co‐occurring species at 17 localities in Japan was examined, based on the assumption that competition for food is an important factor in determining these patterns. The interspecific overlap of mandible length was absent or very low in localities with two or three species, whereas it was more or less evident in localities with four species. For four large coastal species, the geographical distributions of two species with similar mandible lengths are either allopatric or parapatric, whereas those of two species with different mandible lengths largely overlap. These results strongly suggest that size‐assortment in mandible length is important in determining species assemblage and distribution in coastal tiger beetles in Japan.
To reveal the phylogeographical patterns of four species of coastal tiger beetles in Japan (Lophyridia angulata, Abroscelis anchoralis, Cicindela lewisii and Chaetodera laetescripta), we conducted phylogenetic and nested clade analysis (NCA) using the mitochondrial DNA sequences of two loci (COI and 16S rRNA), with specimens sampled from Japan and neighbouring countries. Abroscelis anchoralis and L. angulata have similar disjunct distributions in Japan. The NCA indicated past fragmentation involving three isolated areas of A. anchoralis. In contrast, local populations of L. angulata in Japan shared the same haplotype, indicating recent vicariance. Co-occurrence of haplotypes from several divergent clades in Japanese populations of Ch. laetescripta suggested ancient vicariance and subsequent intermixing of local populations. The tree topology of C. lewisii, with shallow branches and little geographical segregation of haplotypes between Japan and Korea or within Japan, suggested that the Japanese population was segregated from the Korean population only recently. Restricted gene flow, with isolation by distance, was inferred for various geographical associations of haplotypes for coastal tiger beetles in the NCA. Based on these phylogeographical patterns, coupled with a molecular clock approach, the evolutionary history of four species of coastal tiger beetles was deduced, with the additional consideration of the competitive relationships among those species. We also discuss the conservation of highly localized A. anchoralis populations in Japan, using the concept of evolutionarily significant units.
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