Evolutionary relationships among hares from North Africa (Lepus sp or Lepus spp.), cape hares (L-capensis) from South Africa, and brown hares (L-europaeus), as inferred from mtDNA PCR-RFLP and allozyme data

被引:23
作者
Ben Slimen, H
Suchentrunk, F
Memmi, A
Sert, H
Kryger, U
Alves, PC
Elgaaied, AB
机构
[1] Fac Sci Tunis, Lab Genet Mol Immunol & Biotechnol, Tunis 2029, Tunisia
[2] Univ Vet Med Vienna, Res Inst Wildlife Ecol, A-1160 Vienna, Austria
[3] Fac Pharm Monasstir, Monastir, Tunisia
[4] Akdeniz Univ, Fen Edebiyat Fak, Biyoloji Bolumu, TR-07058 Kampus, Antalya, Turkey
[5] Univ Pretoria, Dept Zool & Entomol, ZA-0001 Pretoria, South Africa
[6] CIBIO UP, P-4485661 Vairao, Vila Do Conde, Portugal
关键词
Leporidae; Lepus; hares; mtDNA PCR-RFLP; allozymes; phylogenetic relationships; gene pool differentiation;
D O I
10.1111/j.1439-0469.2005.00345.x
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Systematics and taxonomy of hares of the genus Lepus (Lagomorpha) are under contentious debate, and phylogenetic relationships among many taxa are not well understood. Here we study genetic differentiation and evolutionary relationships among North African hares, currently considered subspecies of Lepus capensis, cape hares (L. capensis) from the Cape province in South Africa, and brown hares (L. europeaus) from Europe and Anatolia, using maternally (mtDNA) and biparentally (allozymes) inherited markers. A polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) analysis of a c. 1.8 kb long segment of the mitochondrial control region using eight hexanucleotide-recognizing restriction endonucleases yielded 28 haplotypes, and horizontal starch gel electrophoresis of proteins encoded by 25 structural gene loci revealed 52 alleles at 18 polymorphic loci. Diverse phylogenetic analyses (neighbor joining dendrogram, median joining network, multidimensional scaling of pairwise distances, AMOVA, F-statistics, hierarchical F-statistics) of genetic variants revealed marked substructuring of mtDNA into three phylogeographic groups, namely an African, a central European, and an Anatolian, but a somewhat less pronounced overall differentiation of the nuclear genome, despite a relatively high number of population-specific (private) alleles. However, all our results are not incongruent with Petter's (1959: Mammalia 23, 41; 1961: Z. f. Saugetierkunde26, 30; 1972: Societe Des Sciences Naturelles et Physiques du Maroc52, 122) hypothesis that North African hares generally belong to L. capensis and that brown hares should be included in this species as well.
引用
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页码:88 / 99
页数:12
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