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Concepts of macro- and microevolution as related to the problem of origin and global expansion of the plague pathogen Yersinia pestis
Authors:V V Suntsov  N I Suntsova
Institution:(1) Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninskii pr. 33, Moscow, 117077, Russia;(2) Lomonosov Moscow State University, Ecocenter, Vorob’evy gory, Moscow, 119992, Russia;(3) Russian-Vietnamese Tropical Center, No. 3, Street 3/2, 10 Distr., Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Abstract:The relationship between macro- and microevolutionary processes is considered with reference to the ecological scenario of the origin of the plague pathogen and its subsequent natural and anthropogenic global expansion. The macroevolutionary transformation of the ancestral pseudotuberculosis microbe clone into the initial plague microbe Yersinia pestis tarbagani occurred in Central Asia at the end of the Late Pleistocene by a “vertical” Darwinian way in an inadaptive heterothermal continual intermediate environment—the Mongolian marmot Marmota sibirica—flea Oropsylla silantiewi system—via a sequence of unstable and currently extinct intermediate forms. Its natural geographic expansion on the “oil spot” principle in the postglacial time led to the microevolutionary formation of 20–30 hostal subspecies circulating in populations of the background species of burrowing rodents and pikas in arid areas of Eurasia. The intercontinental spread of the “marmot” and “rat” pathogen subspecies in the past few centuries has been exclusively anthropogenic, with the involvement of synanthropic (ship) rats.
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