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Cryptic speciation in the field vole: a multilocus approach confirms three highly divergent lineages in Eurasia
Authors:J. Paupério  J. S. Herman  J. Melo‐Ferreira  M. Jaarola  P. C. Alves  J.B. Searle
Affiliation:1. CIBIO, Centro de Investiga??o em Biodiversidade e Recursos Genéticos, Universidade do Porto, , 4485‐661 Vair?o, Portugal;2. Department of Biology, University of York, , York, YO10 5DD UK;3. Departamento de Biologia, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade do Porto, , 4169‐007 Porto, Portugal;4. Department of Natural Sciences, National Museums Scotland, , Edinburgh, EH1 1JF UK;5. Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Link?ping University, , 581 85 Link?ping, Sweden;6. Wildlife Biology Program, College of Forestry and Conservation, University of Montana, , 32 Campus Drive, Missoula, MT 59801, USA;7. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, , Ithaca, NY, 14853‐2701 USA
Abstract:Species are generally described from morphological features, but there is growing recognition of sister forms that show substantial genetic differentiation without obvious morphological variation and may therefore be considered ‘cryptic species’. Here, we investigate the field vole (Microtus agrestis), a Eurasian mammal with little apparent morphological differentiation but which, on the basis of previous sex‐linked nuclear and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) analyses, is subdivided into a Northern and a Southern lineage, sufficiently divergent that they may represent two cryptic species. These earlier studies also provided limited evidence for two major mtDNA lineages within Iberia. In our present study, we extend these findings through a multilocus approach. We sampled 163 individuals from 46 localities, mainly in Iberia, and sequenced seven loci, maternally, paternally and biparentally inherited. Our results show that the mtDNA lineage identified in Portugal is indeed a distinct third lineage on the basis of other markers as well. In fact, multilocus coalescent‐based methods clearly support three separate evolutionary units that may represent cryptic species: Northern, Southern and Portuguese. Divergence among these units was inferred to have occurred during the last glacial period; the Portuguese lineage split occurred first (estimated at c. 70 000 bp ), and the Northern and Southern lineages separated at around the last glacial maximum (estimated at c. 18 500 bp ). Such recent formation of evolutionary units that might be considered species has repercussions in terms of understanding evolutionary processes and the diversity of small mammals in a European context.
Keywords:cryptic species  demography     Microtus agrestis     phylogeography  species tree
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