Holarctic phylogeography of the tundra shrew (Sorex tundrensis) based on mitochondrial genesстатья
Информация о цитировании статьи получена из
Web of Science ,
Scopus
Статья опубликована в журнале из списка Web of Science и/или Scopus
Дата последнего поиска статьи во внешних источниках: 18 июля 2013 г.
Авторы:
Bannikova A.A. ,
Dokuchaev E.N. ,
Yudina E.V. ,
Bobretzov A.V. ,
Sheftel B.I. ,
Ilyashenko V. ,
Lebedev V.S.
Журнал:
Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
Том:
101
Год издания:
2010
Издательство:
Blackwell Publishing Inc.
Местоположение издательства:
United Kingdom
Первая страница:
721
Последняя страница:
746
Аннотация:
A range-wide phylogeographic study of the tundra shrew (Sorex tundrensis) was performed using cytochrome b and cytochrome oxidase I (COI) mitochondrial genes. The results based on 121 specimens from 42 localities demonstrate that the tundra shrew is divided into five main mitochondrial DNA phylogenetic lineages with largely parapatric distribution. In addition to a single Nearctic clade (Alaska) four Palearctic clades are identified: Western (Northen Urals, Kazakhstan, South-West Siberia), Eastern (from East Transbaikalia and the Middle Amur to Chukotka), South Central (Central Siberia, the Altai, the Dzhungarian Alatau) and North Central (Northern Siberia, Central Yakutia). Date estimates obtained by use of a molecular clock corrected for potential rate decay suggest Late Pleistocene age for the most recent common ancestor of all contemporary tundra shrew populations. Relatively high genetic divergence between phylogroups (0.95–1.6%) indicates that the observed phylogeographic structure was initiated by historical events that predated the Last Glacial Maximum. We assume that, being more cold- and arid-tolerant, tundra shrew underwent expansion during an early cold phase of the Last Glacial and spread through its recent range earlier than most of other Siberian red-toothed shrews. Comparative phylogeographic analysis of Siberian shrews and rodents suggests that evolutionary histories of species associated with azonal or open habitats show important differences compared to forest species. © 2010 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2010, 101, 721–746.
Добавил в систему:
Банникова Анна Андреевна
Прикрепленные файлы
№
Имя
Описание
Имя файла
Размер
Добавлен
1.
Полный текст
pdf
Tundrensis_bij_1510.pdf
860,6 КБ
3 ноября 2014
[hylomys ]