Johnson Jeff A, Burnham Kurt K, Burnham William A, Mindell David P
The Peregrine Fund, 5668 West Flying Hawk Lane, Boise, ID 83709, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2007 Aug;16(15):3145-60. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2007.03373.x.
Little is known about the possible influence that past glacial events have had on the phylogeography and population structure of avian predators in the Arctic and sub-Arctic. In this study, we use microsatellite and mitochondrial control region DNA variation to investigate the population genetic structure of gyrfalcons (Falco rusticolus) throughout a large portion of their circumpolar distribution. In most locations sampled, the mtDNA data revealed little geographic structure; however, five out of eight mtDNA haplotypes were unique to a particular geographic area (Greenland, Iceland, or Alaska) and the Iceland population differed from others based on haplotype frequency differences (F(ST)). With the microsatellite results, significant population structure (F(ST), principal components analysis, and cluster analysis) was observed identifying Greenland and Iceland as separate populations, while Norway, Alaska and Canada were identified as a single population consistent with contemporary gene flow across Russia. Within Greenland, differing levels of gene flow between western and eastern sampling locations was indicated with apparent asymmetric dispersal in western Greenland from north to south. This dispersal bias is in agreement with the distribution of plumage colour variants with white gyrfalcons in much higher proportion in northern Greenland. Lastly, because the mtDNA control region sequence differed by only one to four nucleotides from a common haplotype among all gyrfalcons, we infer that the observed microsatellite population genetic structure has developed since the last glacial maximum. This conclusion is further supported by our finding that a closely related species, the saker falcon (Falco cherrug), has greater genetic heterogeneity, including mtDNA haplotypes differing by 1-16 nucleotide substitutions from a common gyrfalcon haplotype. This is consistent with gyrfalcons having expanded rapidly from a single glacial-age refugium to their current circumpolar distribution. Additional sampling of gyrfalcons from Fennoscandia and Russia throughout Siberia is necessary to test putative gene flow between Norway and Alaska and Canada as suggested by this study.
关于过去的冰川事件对北极和亚北极地区猛禽的系统地理学和种群结构可能产生的影响,人们了解甚少。在本研究中,我们利用微卫星和线粒体控制区DNA变异,来调查矛隼(矛隼)在其环极分布的大部分区域内的种群遗传结构。在大多数采样地点,线粒体DNA数据显示出很少的地理结构;然而,八个线粒体DNA单倍型中有五个是特定地理区域(格陵兰、冰岛或阿拉斯加)所特有的,并且冰岛种群基于单倍型频率差异(F(ST))与其他种群不同。根据微卫星结果,观察到显著的种群结构(F(ST)、主成分分析和聚类分析),确定格陵兰和冰岛为独立的种群,而挪威、阿拉斯加和加拿大被确定为一个单一的种群,这与当代基因在俄罗斯的流动情况一致。在格陵兰岛内部,西部和东部采样地点之间的基因流动水平不同,表明格陵兰岛西部存在从北向南明显的不对称扩散。这种扩散偏差与羽毛颜色变体的分布一致,白色矛隼在格陵兰岛北部的比例要高得多。最后,由于所有矛隼的线粒体DNA控制区序列与一个常见单倍型仅相差1至4个核苷酸,我们推断观察到的微卫星种群遗传结构是自末次盛冰期以来形成的。我们的发现进一步支持了这一结论,即一个密切相关的物种,猎隼(矛隼),具有更大的遗传异质性,包括线粒体DNA单倍型与常见矛隼单倍型相差1 - 16个核苷酸替换。这与矛隼从单一的冰期避难所迅速扩张到其当前的环极分布相一致。如本研究所示,有必要对来自斯堪的纳维亚半岛和俄罗斯整个西伯利亚地区的矛隼进行额外采样,以测试挪威与阿拉斯加和加拿大之间假定的基因流动情况。