“…on the scale of metres) habitatspecific morphological differentiation driven primarily by variation in crab predation and wave exposure [15,17,18]. In each location, pairs of divergent ecotypes display distinct morphologies (E & S, Sweden [19]; RB & SU, Spain [20]; H & M, Britain [21]), partial reduction of gene flow [22][23][24][25] and evidence of reproductive isolation [21,26,27], providing support for multiple independent divergence events and suggesting L. saxatilis as a model of incipient sympatric speciation [17,18,26,28]. Yet, despite its importance as one of the few marine examples of incipient sympatric speciation [29], the necessity of lineage-wide phylogenetic context for model systems of sympatric speciation [30,31] and the established role of historical allopatric divergence in North Atlantic marine species [3,4], little is known about the evolutionary history of L. saxatilis across its trans-Atlantic range.…”