4.7 Article

Tracing the phylogeographic history of Southeast Asian long-tailed macaques through mitogenomes of museum specimens

Journal

MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION
Volume 116, Issue -, Pages 227-238

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2017.08.006

Keywords

Southeast Asia; High-throughput sequencing; Phylogeography; Intraspecific phylogeny; Macaca fascicularis; Museum specimens

Funding

  1. NSF [DDIG DEB-1501733]
  2. Field Museum
  3. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  4. Field Museum Women-in-Science Graduate Fellowship [NSF GRFP 100152161]
  5. Arts and Science Fund from the Arts, Science and Culture Initiative at University of Chicago
  6. Hinds Fund Award
  7. Field Museum Pritzker Lab Award
  8. Committee on Evolutionary Biology at University of Chicago

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The biogeographical history of Southeast Asia is complicated due to the continuous emergences and disappearances of land bridges throughout the Pleistocene. Here, we use long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis), which are widely distributed throughout the mainland and islands of Southeast Asia, as a model for better understanding the biogeographical patterns of diversification in this geographically complex region. A reliable intraspecific phylogeny including individuals from localities on oceanic islands, continental islands, and the mainland is needed to trace relatedness along with the pattern and timing of colonization in this region. We used high-throughput sequencing techniques to sequence mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomes) from 95 Southeast Asian M. fascicularis specimens housed at natural history museums around the world. To achieve a comprehensive picture, we more than tripled the mitogenome sample size for M. fascicularis from previous studies, and for the first time included documented samples from the Philippines and several small Indonesian islands. Confirming the result from a previous, recent intraspecific phylogeny for M. fascicularis, the newly reconstructed phylogeny of 135 specimens divides the samples into two major clades: Clade A includes haplotypes from the mainland and some from northern Sumatra, while Clade B includes all insular haplotypes along with lineages from southern Sumatra. This study resolves a previous disparity by revealing a disjunction in the origin of Sumatran macaques, with separate lineages originating within the two major clades, suggesting that at least two major migrations to Sumatra occurred. However, our dated phylogeny reveals that the two major clades split similar to 1.88 Ma, which is earlier than in previously published phylogenies. Our new data reveal that most Philippine macaque lineages diverged from the Borneo stock within the last similar to 0.06-0.43 Ma. Finally, our study provides insight into successful sequencing of DNA across museums and shotgun sequencing of DNA specimens as a method to sequence the mitogenome.

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