Cargando…

Limited Phylogeographic Signal in Sex-Linked and Autosomal Loci Despite Geographically, Ecologically, and Phenotypically Concordant Structure of mtDNA Variation in the Holarctic Avian Genus Eremophila

Phylogeographic studies of Holarctic birds are challenging because they involve vast geographic scale, complex glacial history, extensive phenotypic variation, and heterogeneous taxonomic treatment across countries, all of which require large sample sizes. Knowledge about the quality of phylogeograp...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Drovetski, Sergei V., Raković, Marko, Semenov, Georgy, Fadeev, Igor V., Red’kin, Yaroslav A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3907499/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24498139
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087570
_version_ 1782301610151510016
author Drovetski, Sergei V.
Raković, Marko
Semenov, Georgy
Fadeev, Igor V.
Red’kin, Yaroslav A.
author_facet Drovetski, Sergei V.
Raković, Marko
Semenov, Georgy
Fadeev, Igor V.
Red’kin, Yaroslav A.
author_sort Drovetski, Sergei V.
collection PubMed
description Phylogeographic studies of Holarctic birds are challenging because they involve vast geographic scale, complex glacial history, extensive phenotypic variation, and heterogeneous taxonomic treatment across countries, all of which require large sample sizes. Knowledge about the quality of phylogeographic information provided by different loci is crucial for study design. We use sequences of one mtDNA gene, one sex-linked intron, and one autosomal intron to elucidate large scale phylogeographic patterns in the Holarctic lark genus Eremophila. The mtDNA ND2 gene identified six geographically, ecologically, and phenotypically concordant clades in the Palearctic that diverged in the Early - Middle Pleistocene and suggested paraphyly of the horned lark (E. alpestris) with respect to the Temminck's lark (E. bilopha). In the Nearctic, ND2 identified five subclades which diverged in the Late Pleistocene. They overlapped geographically and were not concordant phenotypically or ecologically. Nuclear alleles provided little information on geographic structuring of genetic variation in horned larks beyond supporting the monophyly of Eremophila and paraphyly of the horned lark. Multilocus species trees based on two nuclear or all three loci provided poor support for haplogroups identified by mtDNA. The node ages calculated using mtDNA were consistent with the available paleontological data, whereas individual nuclear loci and multilocus species trees appeared to underestimate node ages. We argue that mtDNA is capable of discovering independent evolutionary units within avian taxa and can provide a reasonable phylogeographic hypothesis when geographic scale, geologic history, and phenotypic variation in the study system are too complex for proposing reasonable a priori hypotheses required for multilocus methods. Finally, we suggest splitting the currently recognized horned lark into five Palearctic and one Nearctic species.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3907499
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-39074992014-02-04 Limited Phylogeographic Signal in Sex-Linked and Autosomal Loci Despite Geographically, Ecologically, and Phenotypically Concordant Structure of mtDNA Variation in the Holarctic Avian Genus Eremophila Drovetski, Sergei V. Raković, Marko Semenov, Georgy Fadeev, Igor V. Red’kin, Yaroslav A. PLoS One Research Article Phylogeographic studies of Holarctic birds are challenging because they involve vast geographic scale, complex glacial history, extensive phenotypic variation, and heterogeneous taxonomic treatment across countries, all of which require large sample sizes. Knowledge about the quality of phylogeographic information provided by different loci is crucial for study design. We use sequences of one mtDNA gene, one sex-linked intron, and one autosomal intron to elucidate large scale phylogeographic patterns in the Holarctic lark genus Eremophila. The mtDNA ND2 gene identified six geographically, ecologically, and phenotypically concordant clades in the Palearctic that diverged in the Early - Middle Pleistocene and suggested paraphyly of the horned lark (E. alpestris) with respect to the Temminck's lark (E. bilopha). In the Nearctic, ND2 identified five subclades which diverged in the Late Pleistocene. They overlapped geographically and were not concordant phenotypically or ecologically. Nuclear alleles provided little information on geographic structuring of genetic variation in horned larks beyond supporting the monophyly of Eremophila and paraphyly of the horned lark. Multilocus species trees based on two nuclear or all three loci provided poor support for haplogroups identified by mtDNA. The node ages calculated using mtDNA were consistent with the available paleontological data, whereas individual nuclear loci and multilocus species trees appeared to underestimate node ages. We argue that mtDNA is capable of discovering independent evolutionary units within avian taxa and can provide a reasonable phylogeographic hypothesis when geographic scale, geologic history, and phenotypic variation in the study system are too complex for proposing reasonable a priori hypotheses required for multilocus methods. Finally, we suggest splitting the currently recognized horned lark into five Palearctic and one Nearctic species. Public Library of Science 2014-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3907499/ /pubmed/24498139 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087570 Text en © 2014 Drovetski et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Drovetski, Sergei V.
Raković, Marko
Semenov, Georgy
Fadeev, Igor V.
Red’kin, Yaroslav A.
Limited Phylogeographic Signal in Sex-Linked and Autosomal Loci Despite Geographically, Ecologically, and Phenotypically Concordant Structure of mtDNA Variation in the Holarctic Avian Genus Eremophila
title Limited Phylogeographic Signal in Sex-Linked and Autosomal Loci Despite Geographically, Ecologically, and Phenotypically Concordant Structure of mtDNA Variation in the Holarctic Avian Genus Eremophila
title_full Limited Phylogeographic Signal in Sex-Linked and Autosomal Loci Despite Geographically, Ecologically, and Phenotypically Concordant Structure of mtDNA Variation in the Holarctic Avian Genus Eremophila
title_fullStr Limited Phylogeographic Signal in Sex-Linked and Autosomal Loci Despite Geographically, Ecologically, and Phenotypically Concordant Structure of mtDNA Variation in the Holarctic Avian Genus Eremophila
title_full_unstemmed Limited Phylogeographic Signal in Sex-Linked and Autosomal Loci Despite Geographically, Ecologically, and Phenotypically Concordant Structure of mtDNA Variation in the Holarctic Avian Genus Eremophila
title_short Limited Phylogeographic Signal in Sex-Linked and Autosomal Loci Despite Geographically, Ecologically, and Phenotypically Concordant Structure of mtDNA Variation in the Holarctic Avian Genus Eremophila
title_sort limited phylogeographic signal in sex-linked and autosomal loci despite geographically, ecologically, and phenotypically concordant structure of mtdna variation in the holarctic avian genus eremophila
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3907499/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24498139
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087570
work_keys_str_mv AT drovetskisergeiv limitedphylogeographicsignalinsexlinkedandautosomallocidespitegeographicallyecologicallyandphenotypicallyconcordantstructureofmtdnavariationintheholarcticaviangenuseremophila
AT rakovicmarko limitedphylogeographicsignalinsexlinkedandautosomallocidespitegeographicallyecologicallyandphenotypicallyconcordantstructureofmtdnavariationintheholarcticaviangenuseremophila
AT semenovgeorgy limitedphylogeographicsignalinsexlinkedandautosomallocidespitegeographicallyecologicallyandphenotypicallyconcordantstructureofmtdnavariationintheholarcticaviangenuseremophila
AT fadeevigorv limitedphylogeographicsignalinsexlinkedandautosomallocidespitegeographicallyecologicallyandphenotypicallyconcordantstructureofmtdnavariationintheholarcticaviangenuseremophila
AT redkinyaroslava limitedphylogeographicsignalinsexlinkedandautosomallocidespitegeographicallyecologicallyandphenotypicallyconcordantstructureofmtdnavariationintheholarcticaviangenuseremophila