Molecular biogeography of red deer Cervus elaphus from eastern Europe: insights from mitochondrial DNA sequences |
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Authors: | Magdalena Niedziałkowska Bogumiła Jędrzejewska Ann-Christin Honnen Thurid Otto Vadim E. Sidorovich Kajetan Perzanowski Anna Skog Günther B. Hartl Tomasz Borowik Aleksei N. Bunevich Johannes Lang Frank E. Zachos |
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Affiliation: | 1. Mammal Research Institute, Polish Academy of Sciences, ul. Waszkiewicza 1, 17-230, Bia?owie?a, Poland 2. Zoological Institute, Christian-Albrechts-University, Olshausenstrasse 40, 24118, Kiel, Germany 3. Institute of Zoology, National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Akademicheskaya str. 27, Minsk, 220072, Republic of Belarus 4. Carpathian Wildlife Research Station in Ustrzyki Dolne, ul. Ogrodowa 10, 38-700, Ustrzyki Dolne, Poland 5. Catholic University of Lublin, ul. Konstantynów 1H, 20-708, Lublin, Poland 6. Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis (CEES), Department of Biology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway 7. State National Park Belovezhskaya Pushcha, Kamenec Raion, 225063, Kamenyuki, Republic of Belarus 8. Institut für Tier?kologie und Naturbildung, Hauptstra?e 30, 35321, Laubach, Germany
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Abstract: | European red deer are known to show a conspicuous phylogeographic pattern with three distinct mtDNA lineages (western, eastern and North-African/Sardinian). The western lineage, believed to be indicative of a southwestern glacial refuge in Iberia and southern France, nowadays covers large areas of the continent including the British Isles, Scandinavia and parts of central Europe, while the eastern lineage is primarily found in southeast-central Europe, the Carpathians and the Balkans. However, large parts of central Europe and the whole northeast of the continent were not covered by previous analyses. To close this gap, we produced mtDNA control region sequences from more than 500 red deer from Denmark, Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine and western Russia and combined our data with sequences available from earlier studies to an overall sample size of almost 1,100. Our results show that the western lineage extends far into the European east and is prominent in all eastern countries except for the Polish Carpathians, Ukraine and Russia where only eastern haplotypes occurred. While the latter may actually reflect the natural northward expansion of the eastern lineage after the last ice age, the present distribution of the western lineage in eastern Europe may in large parts be artificial and a result of translocations and reintroduction of red deer into areas where the species became extinct in historical times. |
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