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Range‐wide multilocus phylogeography of the red fox reveals ancient continental divergence,minimal genomic exchange and distinct demographic histories
Authors:Mark J Statham  James Murdoch  Jan Janecka  Keith B Aubry  Ceiridwen J Edwards  Carl D Soulsbury  Oliver Berry  Zhenghuan Wang  David Harrison  Malcolm Pearch  Louise Tomsett  Judith Chupasko  Benjamin N Sacks
Institution:1. Mammalian Ecology and Conservation Unit, Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, University of California, , Davis, CA, 95616‐8744 USA;2. Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources, 303A Aiken Center, University of Vermont, , Burlington, VT, 05405 USA;3. Department of Biological Sciences, Duquesne University, , Pittsburgh, PA, 15282 USA;4. U.S. Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, , Olympia, WA, 98512 USA;5. Research Laboratory for Archaeology, University of Oxford, Dyson Perrins Building, , Oxford, OX1 3QY UK;6. School of Life Sciences, University of Lincoln, , Lincoln, LN6 7TS UK;7. CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research, Centre for Environment and Life Sciences, , Floreat, WA, 6014 Australia;8. Invasive Animals Cooperative Research Centre, School of Animal Biology (M092), The University of Western Australia, , Crawley, WA, 6009 Australia;9. School of Life Sciences, East China Normal University, , 200062 Shanghai, China;10. Harrison Institute, Bowerwood House, , Sevenoaks, Kent, TN13 3AQ UK;11. Mammal Section, Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum, , London, SW7 5BD UK;12. Mammalogy Department, Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology, , Cambridge, MA, 02138 USA;13. Department of Population Health and Reproduction, University of California, , Davis, CA, 95616‐8744 USA
Abstract:Widely distributed taxa provide an opportunity to compare biogeographic responses to climatic fluctuations on multiple continents and to investigate speciation. We conducted the most geographically and genomically comprehensive study to date of the red fox (Vulpes vulpes), the world's most widely distributed wild terrestrial carnivore. Analyses of 697 bp of mitochondrial sequence in ~1000 individuals suggested an ancient Middle Eastern origin for all extant red foxes and a 400 kya (SD = 139 kya) origin of the primary North American (Nearctic) clade. Demographic analyses indicated a major expansion in Eurasia during the last glaciation (~50 kya), coinciding with a previously described secondary transfer of a single matriline (Holarctic) to North America. In contrast, North American matrilines (including the transferred portion of Holarctic clade) exhibited no signatures of expansion until the end of the Pleistocene (~12 kya). Analyses of 11 autosomal loci from a subset of foxes supported the colonization time frame suggested by mtDNA (and the fossil record) but, in contrast, reflected no detectable secondary transfer, resulting in the most fundamental genomic division of red foxes at the Bering Strait. Endemic continental Y‐chromosome clades further supported this pattern. Thus, intercontinental genomic exchange was overall very limited, consistent with long‐term reproductive isolation since the initial colonization of North America. Based on continental divergence times in other carnivoran species pairs, our findings support a model of peripatric speciation and are consistent with the previous classification of the North American red fox as a distinct species, V. fulva.
Keywords:global phylogeography  mitochondrial DNA  nuclear DNA  Pleistocene  speciation     Vulpes fulva        Vulpes vulpes     Y‐chromosome
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