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Exploring phylogeography and species limits in the Altai vole (Rodentia: Cricetidae)
Authors:Christelle Tougard  Sophie Montuire  Vitaly Volobouev  Evgenia Markova  Julien Contet  Vladimir Aniskin  Jean‐Pierre Quere
Institution:1. UMR CNRS 5554 and UMR IRD 226, Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier, Université Montpellier II, , 34095 Montpellier, Cedex 05, France;2. UMR CNRS 6282 Biogéosciences, Université de Bourgogne, , 21000 Dijon, France;3. Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paléobiodiversité et Evolution, , 21000 Dijon, France;4. UMR CNRS‐MNHN 7205, Origine, Structure, Evolution de la Biodiversité, , 75005 Paris, France;5. Ural Division of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, , 202 Ekaterinburg, 620144 Russia;6. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, , 117071 Moscow, Russia;7. INRA, UMR CBGP (Inra/Ird/Cirad/Montpellier SupAgro), , 34988 Montferrier‐sur‐Lez cedex, France
Abstract:Natural hybridization between species is not a rare event. In arvicoline rodents, hybridization is known to occur in the wild and/or in captivity. In the Microtus arvalis group, cytogenetic studies revealed that there were two distinct chromosomal forms (2n = 46 but a different fundamental number of autosomes). These forms have been attributed to two cryptic species: the common (arvalis) and Altai (obscurus) voles. Recently, individuals with intermediate karyotypes (F1 and backcrosses) were discovered in central European Russia, and, for this reason, other studies have regarded obscurus and arvalis as conspecific. In the present study, to address the question of the species limits in the Altai vole and to infer its evolutionary history, a phylogeographical analysis combined with multivariate morphometric methods and original chromosome data was performed. Two obscurus lineages were identified: the Sino‐Russian and South Caucasian lineages. Both lineages are characterized by low genetic diversity, resulting, in the former, from a past bottleneck event caused by encroaching periglacial areas and, in the latter, from recent rapid population divergence. Introgressive hybridization between the Altai and common voles appears to be the result of a secondary contact following the Last Glacial Maximum in central European Russia. Despite the fact that speciation is an ongoing process in most arvicoline species, the common and Altai voles are genetically divergent, morphologically and karyologically distinct, and exhibit contrasting evolutionary histories. For all these reasons, they should be ranked as species: M. arvalis and M. obscurus. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London
Keywords:cytogenetics  evolution  hybridization  Microtus obscurus  morphometrics  speciation
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