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Molecular phylogeny and the underestimated species diversity of the endemic white‐bellied rat (Rodentia: Muridae: Niviventer) in Southeast Asia and China
Authors:Liang Lu  Deyan Ge  Douglas Chesters  Simon Y W Ho  Ying Ma  Guichang Li  Zhixin Wen  Yongjie Wu  Jun Wang  Lin Xia  Jingli Liu  Tianyu Guo  Xiaolong Zhang  Chaodong Zhu  Qisen Yang  Qiyong Liu
Affiliation:1. State Key Laboratory for Infectious Disease Prevention and Control, Collaborative Innovation Center for Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, National Institute for Communicable Disease Control and Prevention, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, China;2. Key Laboratory of Zoological Systematics and Evolution, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China;3. School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia;4. Qinghai Institute for Endemic Disease Prevention and Control, Qinghai, China;5. State Key Laboratory for Infectious Disease Prevention and Control, National Institute for Communicable Disease Control and Prevention, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, China;6. Institute of Health Quarantine, Chinese Academy of Inspection and Quarantine, Beijing, China
Abstract:The white‐bellied rat, Niviventer, is a genus endemic to Southeast Asia and China. However, the interspecific phylogenetic relationships and species diversity of this genus remain poorly understood. In the present study, single and multi‐locus analyses were performed. Phylogenetic reconstruction on Cytochrome b (512 individuals, including data from Genbank) revealed five major clades with approximately 35 operational taxonomic units (OTUs), a number twice the existing taxonomy. The first clade (Nlangbianis species group) was the earliest diverged. The second clade (N. fulvescens species group) diverged in Southeast Asia, the south and lower altitude regions of the Hengduan Mountains, and Southeast China. The third clade (the N. eha species group) is endemic to high altitudes in Northwest Yunnan and the central region of Himalaya. The fourth clade (the N. andersoni species group), is mainly confined to alpine regions of the Hengduan Mountains. The fifth clade (Nconfucianus species group) is mainly distributed in the north and higher altitude regions of eastern Himalaya, the Hengduan Mountains and Taiwan, with the complex also invading central and northern China. Results from the combined dataset of four genes (Cytochrome b, Cytochrome oxidase subunit I, the D‐loop sequence of the mitochondrial genome and the first exon of the nuclear interphotoreceptor retinoid binding protein) for 82 representative individuals from China generally coincide with the result of the single gene, with 12 OTUs identified. These results provide a preliminary framework for the existing classification of this highly diversified genus. The divergence time of Niviventer based on the four gene topology was dated to the late Miocene ~6.41 Ma. Significant differences were detected in the general body form changes among these units based on voucher specimens. Moreover, geometric morphometric analysis of the cranium shape of voucher specimens indicated significant differences among five major species groups. Shape divergence of the cranium among several OTUs within the N. confucinaus complex is also significant. Our results provide further evidence for rapid and highly underestimated diversification of Niviventer both in genetics and morphology.
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