4.5 Article

Phylogeographic structure and regional history of Lemniscomys striatus (Rodentia: Muridae) in tropical Africa

期刊

JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY
卷 35, 期 11, 页码 2074-2089

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2699.2008.01950.x

关键词

Africa; cytochrome b; historical demography; Lemniscomys; Niger River; phylogenetic analyses; phylogeography; Pleistocene; rodent; Volta River

资金

  1. EU-DGVIII Ecofac program 'Conservation et Utilisation Rationnelle des Ecosystemes Forestiers en Afrique centrale'
  2. WWF Gabon
  3. EU-DGVIII-Biofac program 'Origine et maintien de la biodiversite en Afrique centrale'
  4. Ebola-Foret de Tai (Ivory Coast), OMS Abidjan
  5. PGRR-GFA Terra Systems (Ziama Forest, Guinea)
  6. CIFOR/IRET-Ipassa/Makokou (Gabon)
  7. EU-INCO-DEV [ICA4-CT2002-10050]
  8. VIZIER [LSHG-CT-2004-511960]
  9. DWTC action 1

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Aim This study aims to elucidate the phylogeography of the murid rodent Lemniscomys striatus and to evaluate the relative roles of ecological change, habitat patchiness, rivers and geological barriers in structuring patterns of diversity. Location Sub-Saharan Africa. Methods The extent of phylogeographic patterns and molecular genetic diversity (cytochrome b gene) were addressed in a survey of 128 individuals of L. striatus from 42 localities. Using maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, Bayesian, network and genetic structure analyses, we inferred intraspecific relationships and tested hypotheses for historical patterns of gene flow within L. striatus. Results Our results identified four major geographical clades within L. striatus: a West African clade, a Benin-Nigeria clade, a Central African clade, and an East African clade. Several subclades were identified within these four major clades. Restricted gene flow with isolation by distance was recorded, which is congruent with the low dispersal ability of such a small murid rodent. No clear signal of population expansion was detected within clades or subclades. Main conclusions The western rift system and the Volta and Niger rivers may have acted as long-term extrinsic barriers to gene flow, resulting in the emergence of the four main clades of L. striatus. The observed pattern of mitochondrial variation observed within each clade probably results from late Pleistocene climatic and vegetation changes: during adverse conditions (forest expansion), L. striatus may have survived only in refugia, and then experienced range expansion under favourable conditions (savanna expansion).

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