Population structure,colonization processes and barriers for dispersal in Polish common hamsters (Cricetus cricetus) |
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Authors: | A. Banaszek K. A. Jadwiszczak M. Ratkiewicz J. Ziomek K. Neumann |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute of Biology, University of Bia?ystok, Bia?ystok, Poland;2. Department of Systematic Zoology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland;3. Institute of Pathology, Dessau Medical Centre, Dessau, Germany |
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Abstract: | The phylogeographic relationships of common hamster (Cricetus cricetus) populations in Poland were determined by the analysis of three partial mtDNA sequences: control region, cytochrome b and 16S rRNA. A phylogenetic tree as well as parsimony network, consistently separate Polish common hamsters into two groups: E1 being so far specific for the area of Poland, and P3 which clusters inside a Pannonian lineage, previously described from the Carpathian Basin. Polish hamsters do not share any haplotypes with the ‘North’– lineage from Germany and Western Europe, although Poland most likely represents the main migration corridor from the eastern distribution centre to the western boundary of the species range. Fossil and DNA data indicate a very recent appearance of the E1 lineage in the Polish Uplands, probably at the very end of the last glaciation. On the other hand, the Pannonian group entered southern Poland as early as the second stadial of the last glaciation (Middle Vistulian 53.35 ka). The hamster lineages in Poland seem to show different population structures and demographic histories. |
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Keywords: | Climate change colonization common hamster Cricetus cricetus mitochondrial DNA phylogeography |
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