Department of Evolution Genetics, Institute for Genetics, University of Köln, Zülpicherstraße 47, 50674 Köln, Germany.
Front Zool. 2007 Sep 15;4:20. doi: 10.1186/1742-9994-4-20.
Accurate formal taxonomic designations are thought to be of critical importance for the conservation of endangered taxa. The Galápagos sea lion (GSL), being appreciated as a key element of the Galápagos marine ecosystem, has lately been listed as 'vulnerable' by the IUCN. To date there is, however, hardly any scientific evidence, whether it constitutes a separate entity from its abundant Californian neighbour (CSL). In this paper, we delineate the taxonomic relationships within the genus Zalophus being comprised of the Galápagos sea lion, the Californian sea lion and the already extinct Japanese sea lion (JSL).
Using a set of different phylogenetic reconstruction approaches, we find support for monophyly of all three taxa without evidence of reticulation events. Molecular clock estimates place time to common ancestry of the Galápagos sea lion and the Californian sea lion at about 2.3 +/- 0.5 mya. Genetic separation is further suggested by diagnostic SNPs in the mitochondrial and nuclear genome. Microsatellite markers confirm this trend, showing numerous private alleles at most of the 25 investigated loci. Microsatellite-based estimates of genetic differentiation between the Galápagos sea lion and the Californian sea lion indicate significant genetic differentiation. Gene diversity is 14% lower in the Galápagos sea lion than in the Californian sea lion, but there is no evidence for recent bottleneck events in the Galápagos sea lion.
Based on molecular evidence we build a case for classifying the Galápagos sea lion (Zalophus wollebaeki), the Californian sea lion (Zalophus californianus) and the Japanese sea lion (Zalophus japonicus) as true species. As morphological characters do not necessarily fully reflect the rapid divergence on the molecular level, the study can be considered as a test case for deriving species status from molecular evidence. We further use the results to discuss the role of genetics in conservation policy for an organism that already is under the general protection of the habitat it lives in.
准确的正式分类学名称被认为对濒危分类群的保护至关重要。加拉帕戈斯海狮(GSL)作为加拉帕戈斯海洋生态系统的关键元素,最近被 IUCN 列为“易危”。然而,迄今为止,几乎没有任何科学证据表明它与丰富的加利福尼亚海狮(CSL)是分开的实体。在本文中,我们描绘了由加拉帕戈斯海狮、加利福尼亚海狮和已灭绝的日本海狮(JSL)组成的 Zalophus 属内的分类关系。
使用一组不同的系统发育重建方法,我们发现所有三个分类群的单系性得到支持,没有证据表明有网状进化事件。分子钟估计将加拉帕戈斯海狮和加利福尼亚海狮的共同祖先时间定在大约 2.3 +/- 0.5 百万年前。线粒体和核基因组中的诊断 SNP 进一步表明遗传分离。微卫星标记证实了这一趋势,在大多数 25 个调查的基因座上显示出许多特有等位基因。微卫星遗传分化估计表明,加拉帕戈斯海狮和加利福尼亚海狮之间存在显著的遗传分化。加拉帕戈斯海狮的基因多样性比加利福尼亚海狮低 14%,但没有证据表明加拉帕戈斯海狮最近发生过瓶颈事件。
基于分子证据,我们提出了将加拉帕戈斯海狮(Zalophus wollebaeki)、加利福尼亚海狮(Zalophus californianus)和日本海狮(Zalophus japonicus)分类为真正物种的理由。由于形态特征不一定完全反映分子水平上的快速分化,因此该研究可以被视为从分子证据推断物种地位的一个案例。我们进一步利用这些结果讨论了在遗传保护政策下,一个已经受到其栖息地普遍保护的生物体的遗传因素所起的作用。