6533b7d0fe1ef96bd125ace3
RESEARCH PRODUCT
New insights into the taxonomy and phylogeny of social voles inferred from mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences
Boris KryštufekElena BuzanTanya Zorenkosubject
Species complexbiologyPhylogenetic treeArvicolinaeAnimal ecologyPhylogeneticsCytochrome bMolecular phylogeneticsZoologyAnimal Science and ZoologyMicrotusbiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsdescription
We sequenced the entire cytochrome b gene in Microtus paradoxus from Turkmenistan and Microtus socialis from Crimea and Kalmykia. Phylogenetic relationships among social voles were reconstructed by the inclusion into analyses of a further 23 published haplotypes belonging to six species. The two probabilistic methods which were used in phylogenetic analyses, the Bayesian inference and Maximum Likelihood, yielded very similar results. Both trees showed two highly divergent lineages which were further subdivided into seven species. The socialis lineage encompassed four species (M. socialis, M. irani, M. anatolicus, and M. paradoxus), and the remaining three species clustered into the guentheri lineage (M. guentheri, M. hartingi, M. dogramacii). The ranges for nucleotide divergences between seven species of social voles (4.95–9.28% and 4.18–8.81% for mean and net divergences, respectively) mainly exceeded 4.3%, which is frequently regarded as the conservative cut-off between sibling species in the specious genus Microtus.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-05-01 | Mammalian Biology |