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Two Genetically Distinct Lineages of the Sika Deer, Cervus nippon, in Japanese Islands: Comparison of Mitochondrial D-Loop Region Sequences
Authors:Junko Nagata  Ryuichi Masuda  Hidetoshi B Tamate  Shin-ichiro Hamasaki  Keiji Ochiai  Masahiko Asada  Shirow Tatsuzawa  Kazuki Suda  Hiroyuki Tado  Michihiro C Yoshida
Institution:a Wildlife Management Laboratory, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Ibaraki, 305-8687, Japan;b Chromosome Research Unit, Faculty of Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, 060-0810, Japan;c Faculty of Science and Technology, Senshu University of Ishinomaki, Ishinomaki, 986-8580, Japan;d Wildlife Management Office, Kobe, 651-1303, Japan;e Natural History Museum and Institute, Chiba, Chiba, 260-0852, Japan;f Faculty of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto, 606-8502, Japan;g Faculty of Agriculture, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Fuchu, 183-0054, Japan;h Yamaguchi Prefecture Forestry Guidance Center, Yamaguchi, 753-0001, Japan
Abstract:To investigate genetic diversity among populations of the sika deer, Cervus nippon, nucleotide sequences (705–824 bases) of the mitochondrial D-loop regions were determined in animals from 13 localities in the Japanese islands. Phylogenetic trees constructed by the sequences indicated that the Japanese sika deer is separated into two distinct lineages: the northern Japan group (the Hokkaido island and most of the Honshu mainland) and the southern Japan group (a part of the southern Honshu mainland, the Kyushu island, and small islands around the Kyushu island). All sika deer examined in this study shared four to seven units of repetitive sequences (37 to 40 bases each) within the D-loop sequences. The number of tandem repeats was different among the populations, and it was specific to each population. Six or seven repeats occurred in populations of the northern Japan group, while four or five repeats occurred in populations of the southern Japan group. Each repeat unit included several nucleotide substitutions, compared with others, and 26 types were identified from 31 animals. Sequences of the first, second, and third units in arrays were clearly different between the northern and the southern groups. Based on these D-loop data, colonization and separation of the sika deer populations in the Japanese islands were estimated to have occurred less than 0.5 million years before present. Our results provide an invaluable insight into better understanding the evolutionary history, phylogeny, taxonomy, and population genetics of the sika deer.
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