Fleischer Robert C, Kirchman Jeremy J, Dumbacher John P, Bevier Louis, Dove Carla, Rotzel Nancy C, Edwards Scott V, Lammertink Martjan, Miglia Kathleen J, Moore William S
Genetics Program, National Museum of Natural History and National Zoological Park, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20008, USA.
Biol Lett. 2006 Sep 22;2(3):466-9. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2006.0490.
We used ancient DNA analysis of seven museum specimens of the endangered North American ivory-billed woodpecker (Campephilus principalis) and three specimens of the species from Cuba to document their degree of differentiation and their relationships to other Campephilus woodpeckers. Analysis of these mtDNA sequences reveals that the Cuban and North American ivory bills, along with the imperial woodpecker (Campephilus imperialis) of Mexico, are a monophyletic group and are roughly equidistant genetically, suggesting each lineage may be a separate species. Application of both internal and external rate calibrations indicates that the three lineages split more than one million years ago, in the Mid-Pleistocene. We thus can exclude the hypothesis that Native Americans introduced North American ivory-billed woodpeckers to Cuba. Our sequences of all three woodpeckers also provide an important DNA barcoding resource for identification of non-invasive samples or remains of these critically endangered and charismatic woodpeckers.
我们对七份濒危的北美象牙喙啄木鸟(Campephilus principalis)博物馆标本以及三份来自古巴的该物种标本进行了古DNA分析,以记录它们的分化程度以及它们与其他Campephilus属啄木鸟的关系。对这些线粒体DNA序列的分析表明,古巴和北美象牙喙啄木鸟,以及墨西哥的帝王啄木鸟(Campephilus imperialis),构成一个单系群,并且在基因上大致等距,这表明每个谱系可能是一个独立的物种。内部和外部速率校准的应用表明,这三个谱系在更新世中期就已分化,时间超过一百万年。因此,我们可以排除美洲原住民将北美象牙喙啄木鸟引入古巴的假说。我们所获得的这三种啄木鸟的序列,也为识别这些极度濒危且极具魅力的啄木鸟的非侵入性样本或遗骸提供了重要的DNA条形码资源。