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Phylogeography of a Holarctic nematode, Soboliphyme baturini, among mustelids: climate change, episodic colonization, and diversification in a complex host–parasite system
Authors:ANSON V. A. KOEHLER   ERIC P. HOBERG  NIKOLAI E. DOKUCHAEV  NINA A. TRANBENKOVA  JACKSON S. WHITMAN  DAVID W. NAGORSEN   JOSEPH A. COOK
Affiliation:Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131, USA;
United States National Parasite Collection, Animal Parasitic Diseases Laboratory, United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville, Maryland 20705, USA;
Institute of Biological Problems of the North, Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Magadan, Russia;
Kamchatka Institute of Ecology and Nature Management, Petropavlovsk, Russia;
Alaska Department of Fish and Game, 1300 College Road, Fairbanks, Alaska 99701-1599, USA;
Mammalia Biological Consulting, 4268 Metchosin Road, Victoria, V9C 3Z4, Canada
Abstract:Phylogeography of Soboliphyme baturini , a nematode parasite in mustelids, is explored across Beringia. Sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dehydrogenase subunit 4 genes were evaluated from 37 S. baturini , representing 19 localities throughout Alaska, Canada, and Siberia. A total of 30 haplotypes was recovered and maximum parsimony and Bayesian phylogenetic analyses support the recognition of a single species with a distribution extending from the Palearctic to the Nearctic. Within S. baturini , a host-specific partition in North America between Martes caurina and Martes americana was not identified. Instead, substantial geographic structure within S. baturini relates to the dynamic geological history of this northern region and especially the North Pacific Coast. Beringia and other coastal refugia along the western margin of North America played a large role during stadial maxima in the persistence and divergence of the parasite. Repeated events for biotic expansion and geographic colonization across the Bering Land Bridge and the Holarctic during glacial maxima in the Pleistocene appear to have facilitated at least two episodes of host-switching of this nematode among mustelids in populations now distributed in eastern Beringia.  © 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society , 2009, 96 , 651–663.
Keywords:Alaska    Beringia    Canada    COI    Martes    ND4    Siberia
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