Search results for "GENETIC CONSEQUENCES"

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Mitochondrial phylogeography of the edible dormouse (Glis glis) in the western Palearctic region

2010

International audience; This study describes in detail the phylogeoraphic pattern Of the edible dormouse (Glis glis) a European rodent With pronounced hibernating behavior We Used sequences of 831 base pairs of the mitochondrial DNA cytochrome-b gene from 130 edible dormice collected at 43 localities (throughout Its distribution. Our results reveal presence of 3 main haplogroups: Sicilian, South Italian (restricted to the Calabrian region) (a widespread lineage corresponding to all remaining western, central. and eastern European populations). Examination of paleontological data confirms refugial regions for G,Its in the 3 Mediterranean peninsulas, although overall low genetic diversity is …

0106 biological sciencesEUROPEpostglacial colonization[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]ZoologyGENETIC CONSEQUENCESmitochondrial DNABiologyphylogeography010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHaplogroup03 medical and health sciencesRefugium (population biology)biology.animalGeneticsGLACIAL REFUGIAGenetic variabilitydormouse Europe glacial refugia Glis glis mitochondrial DNA phylogeography postglacial colonizationWOODMOUSE APODEMUS-SYLVATICUSDormouseMAXIMUM-LIKELIHOODEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyNature and Landscape ConservationEdible dormouse0303 health sciencesGenetic diversityEcologyPOPULATION-GROWTHEcology15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationDNA-SEQUENCESEastern europeandormousePhylogeographyVOLE MICROTUS-ARVALIS[SDE]Environmental SciencesAnimal Science and ZoologyICE AGESGlis glis
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Pleistocene allopatric differentiation followed by recent range expansion explains the distribution and molecular diversity of two congeneric crustac…

2021

AbstractPleistocene glaciations had a tremendous impact on the biota across the Palaearctic, resulting in strong phylogeographic signals of range contraction and rapid postglacial recolonization of the deglaciated areas. Here, we explore the diversity patterns and history of two sibling species of passively dispersing taxa typical of temporary ponds, fairy shrimps (Anostraca). We combine mitochondrial (COI) and nuclear (ITS2 and 18S) markers to conduct a range-wide phylogeographic study including 56 populations of Branchinecta ferox and Branchinecta orientalis in the Palaearctic. Specifically, we investigate whether their largely overlapping ranges in Europe resulted from allopatric differe…

SCALE DISPERSALPleistoceneRange (biology)LARGE BRANCHIOPODS CRUSTACEASciencePopulation DynamicsSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaAllopatric speciationGENETIC CONSEQUENCESDNA MitochondrialArticleEvolution MolecularANOSTRACAN FAUNAAnimalsGlacial periodPondsEcosystemPhylogenyFAIRY SHRIMPStochastic ProcessesBranchiopodaScience & TechnologyMultidisciplinaryModels GeneticbiologyEcologyGenetic DriftQRGenetic VariationBranchinectaBiodiversityBAYESIAN PHYLOGENETIC INFERENCEFRESH-WATER INVERTEBRATESbiology.organism_classificationBRINE SHRIMPSPhylogeneticsMultidisciplinary SciencesGenetic divergencePhylogeographyPhylogeographyHaplotypesBiogeographyScience & Technology - Other TopicsMEDITERRANEAN BASINPASSIVE DISPERSALBiological dispersalMedicineAnostracaScientific Reports
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