Data from: Phylogeography of the small Indian civet and origin of introductions to western Indian Ocean islands
The biogeographic dynamics affecting the Indian subcontinent, East and Southeast Asia during the Plio-Pleistocene has generated complex biodiversity patterns. We assessed the molecular biogeography of the small Indian civet (Viverricula indica) through mitogenome and cytochrome b + control region se...
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Zusammenfassung: | The biogeographic dynamics affecting the Indian subcontinent, East and
Southeast Asia during the Plio-Pleistocene has generated complex
biodiversity patterns. We assessed the molecular biogeography of the small
Indian civet (Viverricula indica) through mitogenome and cytochrome b +
control region sequencing of 89 historical and modern samples to (i)
establish a time-calibrated phylogeography across the species’ native
range and (ii) test introduction scenarios to western Indian Ocean
islands. Bayesian phylogenetic analyses identified three geographic
lineages (East Asia, sister-group to Southeast Asia and the Indian
subcontinent + northern Indochina) diverging 3.2 – 2.3 Mya, with no clear
signature of past demographic expansion. Within Southeast Asia, Balinese
populations separated from the rest 2.6 – 1.3 Mya. Western Indian Ocean
populations were assigned to the Indian subcontinent + northern Indochina
lineage and had the lowest mitochondrial diversity. Approximate Bayesian
computation did not distinguish between single vs. multiple introduction
scenarios. The early diversification of the small Indian civet was likely
shaped by humid periods in the Late Pliocene – Early Pleistocene that
created evergreen rainforest barriers, generating areas of intra-specific
endemism in the Indian subcontinent, East and Southeast Asia. Later
Pleistocene dispersals through drier conditions in South and Southeast
Asia were likely, giving rise to the species’ current natural
distribution. Our molecular data supported the delineation of only four
subspecies in V. indica, including an endemic Balinese lineage. Our study
also highlighted the influence of pre-first millennium AD introductions to
western Indian Ocean islands, with Indian and/or Arab traders probably
introducing the species for its civet oil. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.dt177 |