Table 2.
Unique haplotype | Number of localities | Distribution |
---|---|---|
Coaldale MLZ 1817 | 7 | Western Clade: Coaldale (MLZ 1817), Dyer (MLZ 1785, MLZ 1787, and MLZ 1789), Luning(MLZ 1810), Marietta (MLZ 1777 and MLZ 1778), Mina (MLZ 1780, MLZ 1781, and MLZ1783), Schurz (MLZ 1819) and Silver Peak (MLZ 1945) |
SE Tonopah MLZ 1823 | 5 | Eastern Clade: E Tonopah (MLZ 1823, MLZ 1825 and MLZ 1826), E Tonopah (MLZ 1801 andMLZ 1802) Goldfield (MLZ 1746), NE Warm Springs (MLZ 1955) and SE Goldfield (MLZ2051) |
SE Tonopah MLZ 1830 | 4 | Eastern Clade: SE Tonopah (MLZ 1830), Currant (MLZ 2001 and MLZ 2004), Goldfield(MLZ 1743) and NE Warm Springs (MLZ 1952) |
Luning MLZ 1805 | 3 | Western Clade: Luning (MLZ 1805, MLZ 1806 and MLZ 1809), San Antonio (MLZ 1798)and Schurz (MLZ 1818) |
SE Tonopah MLZ 1824 | 2 | Eastern Clade: SE Tonopah (MLZ 1824) and SE Goldfield (MLZ 2052) |
SE Tonopah MLZ 1828 | 2 | Eastern Clade: SE Tonopah (MLZ 1828 and MLZ 1829) and E Tonopah (MLZ 1804 |
Currant MLZ 2000 | 2 | Eastern Clade: Currant (MLZ 2000, MLZ 2002, and MLZ 2003) and NE Warm Springs(MLZ 1906) |
NE Warm Springs MLZ 1953 | 2 | Eastern Clade: NE Warm Springs (MLZ 1953) and Lockes (MLZ 2017) |
San Antonio MLZ 1796 | 2 | Western Clade: San Antonio (MLZ 1796) and Yerington (MLZ 1833, MLZ 1836, MLZ 1837,and MLZ 1839) |
Nine unique haplotypes, identified in Fig. 2, are present at two or more general localities and are available for directional analyses of phylogeographical patterns (DAPP; see text). In total, there are 45 pairwise combinations of shared haplotypes (25 in the Western Clade and 20 in the Eastern Clade) that provide the basis for directional data.