Mitogenomic phylogenetics and population genetics of several taxa of agouties (Dasyprocta sp., Dasyproctidae, Rodentia): molecular nonexistence of some claimed endemic taxa
Some neotropical rodents are of special interest because they are an important source of animal protein for human indigenous populations throughout Latin America. This is the case of the genus Dasyprocta (agouties). However, we still do not know how many species, taxa, or lineages are within Dasypro...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Mammal research 2022, Vol.67 (3), p.367-397 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Some neotropical rodents are of special interest because they are an important source of animal protein for human indigenous populations throughout Latin America. This is the case of the genus
Dasyprocta
(agouties). However, we still do not know how many species, taxa, or lineages are within
Dasyprocta
. To address this issue, we analyzed the complete mitogenomes of 93 specimens in addition to three mitochondrial genes of 128 specimens of
Dasyprocta
belonging to six supposed species (
D. fuliginosa
,
D. punctata
,
D. leporina
,
D. kalinowski
,
D. ruatanica
, and
D. azarae
). The phylogenetic results indicated five different lineages within
D. fuliginosa
, with two being polyphyletic (one more related to
D. leporina
and another more related to
D. punctata
).
D. kalinowski
, a species endemic to Peru, was un-differentiable from one of these
D. fuliginosa
lineages.
D. azarae
was related with some of the lineages of
D. fuliginosa
. Within
D. leporina
, two significant lineages were found (in central Atlantic Brazil and on the Caribbean islands of Trinidad and Tobago). Within
D. punctata
, three lineages were detected, one in Central America (central and northern), including
D. ruatanica
, a supposed endemic species on Roatan Island, Honduras, another in central and southern Panama, and another in trans-Andean and Pacific Colombia and Ecuador. Some of the lineages of
D. fuliginosa
from the western Amazon yielded the most ancestral haplotypes (around 7 million years ago, MYA, Late Miocene). In contrast, haplotypes of a lineage of
D. punctata
and those of a lineage of
D. leporina
(Trinidad and Tobago) were the most derived (around 0.2–0.3 MYA, Pleistocene). Other population genetic results showed that all groups or lineages presented elevated levels of genetic diversity, with the exception
D. leporina
in Trinidad and Tobago. Their lower genetic diversity is probably related to founder effect during the colonization of the Caribbean island, due to a bottleneck. Some of these
Dasyprocta
taxa showed some population expansions during the Pleistocene, but all of the lineages experienced some population decrease during the last 10,000–20,000 years. Note that some lineages showed a small population increase in the last few centuries. The spatial genetic structure was highly developed throughout the Neotropics for
Dasyprocta
. According to this study, (1) coat color (routinely used in the systematics of this rodent) is not valuable from a phylogenetic and systematics per |
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ISSN: | 2199-2401 2199-241X |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13364-022-00626-6 |