Phylogeography of Microtus longicaudus in the Tectonically and Glacially Dynamic Central Rocky Mountains

The central Rocky Mountain region of North America lies at the biogeographic crossroads of the Rocky Mountains, Great Plains, and Great Basin. Here, we examine genetic patterns in an abundant, widely distributed, and ecologically important rodent species, the long-tailed vole (Microtus longicaudus),...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of mammalogy 2009-06, Vol.90 (3), p.571-584
Hauptverfasser: Spaeth, P. A., van Tuinen, M., Chan, Y. L., Terca, D., Hadly, E. A.
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 571
container_title Journal of mammalogy
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creator Spaeth, P. A.
van Tuinen, M.
Chan, Y. L.
Terca, D.
Hadly, E. A.
description The central Rocky Mountain region of North America lies at the biogeographic crossroads of the Rocky Mountains, Great Plains, and Great Basin. Here, we examine genetic patterns in an abundant, widely distributed, and ecologically important rodent species, the long-tailed vole (Microtus longicaudus), across this climatically and tectonically dynamic landscape. We examine patterns of genetic diversity in relation to the species' overall phylogeographic distribution using mitochondrial cytochrome-b sequences from modern, historic, ancient, and published samples. Our analyses reveal extensive genetic diversity in the central Rockies, a lack of population structure, and a lack of concordance between genetic and morphological subspecies distributions. Patterns of genetic variation in late-Holocene and modern populations are similar. We conclude that geographical features such as the Continental Divide, previously isolated glacial cover, and major rivers do not result in persistent genetic structure within the long-tailed vole. We also conclude that the central Rocky Mountain region is a zone of secondary contact for divergent mitochondrial lineages of the long-tailed vole.
doi_str_mv 10.1644/08-MAMM-A-204R2.1
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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); JSTOR; BioOne Complete
subjects ancient DNA (aDNA)
Animal ethology
Biological and medical sciences
Biological taxonomies
cytochrome b
dispersal
DNA
Ecological genetics
Evolutionary genetics
Feature s
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Genetic diversity
Genetic structure
Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
Haplotypes
Holocene
Mammalia
Mammalogy
Microtus longicaudus
Mountain regions
Mountains
Museums
phylogeography
Population genetics
Population structure
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Rocky Mountains
Specimens
Vertebrata
Vertebrates: general zoology, morphology, phylogeny, systematics, cytogenetics, geographical distribution
Voles
title Phylogeography of Microtus longicaudus in the Tectonically and Glacially Dynamic Central Rocky Mountains
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