Gabriel S I, Mathias M L, Searle J B
CESAM - Centre for Environmental and Marine Studies, Departamento de Biologia Animal, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal; Department of Biology, University of York, York, UK.
J Evol Biol. 2015 Jan;28(1):130-45. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12550. Epub 2014 Dec 6.
Humans have introduced many species onto remote oceanic islands. The house mouse (Mus musculus) is a human commensal and has consequently been transported to oceanic islands around the globe as an accidental stowaway. The history of these introductions can tell us not only about the mice themselves but also about the people that transported them. Following a phylogeographic approach, we used mitochondrial D-loop sequence variation (within an 849- to 864-bp fragment) to study house mouse colonization of the Azores. A total of 239 sequences were obtained from all nine islands, and interpretation was helped by previously published Iberian sequences and 66 newly generated Spanish sequences. A Bayesian analysis revealed presence in the Azores of most of the D-loop clades previously described in the domesticus subspecies of the house mouse, suggesting a complex colonization history of the archipelago as a whole from multiple geographical origins, but much less heterogeneity (often single colonization?) within islands. The expected historical link with mainland Portugal was reflected in the pattern of D-loop variation of some of the islands but not all. A more unexpected association with a distant North European source area was also detected in three islands, possibly reflecting human contact with the Azores prior to the 15th century discovery by Portuguese mariners. Widening the scope to colonization of the Macaronesian islands as a whole, human linkages between the Azores, Madeira, the Canaries, Portugal and Spain were revealed through the sharing of mouse sequences between these areas. From these and other data, we suggest mouse studies may help resolve historical uncertainties relating to the 'Age of Discovery'.
人类已将许多物种引入偏远的海洋岛屿。家鼠(小家鼠)是与人类共生的动物,因此作为意外偷渡者被运送到了全球的海洋岛屿。这些引入的历史不仅能告诉我们有关老鼠本身的信息,还能让我们了解运输它们的人类情况。采用系统发育地理学方法,我们利用线粒体D环序列变异(在849至864碱基对片段内)来研究家鼠在亚速尔群岛的殖民情况。从所有九个岛屿共获得了239个序列,先前发表的伊比利亚序列和新生成的66个西班牙序列有助于我们进行解读。贝叶斯分析表明,家鼠domesticus亚种先前描述的大多数D环分支在亚速尔群岛都有存在,这表明整个群岛有着来自多个地理起源的复杂殖民历史,但各岛屿内部的异质性要小得多(通常是单次殖民?)。部分岛屿的D环变异模式反映了与葡萄牙大陆预期的历史联系,但并非所有岛屿都是如此。在三个岛屿中还检测到了与遥远的北欧源区更为意外的关联,这可能反映了在15世纪葡萄牙水手发现该群岛之前人类与亚速尔群岛的接触。将范围扩大到整个马卡罗尼西亚群岛的殖民情况,通过这些地区之间家鼠序列的共享,揭示了亚速尔群岛、马德拉群岛、加那利群岛、葡萄牙和西班牙之间的人类联系。从这些以及其他数据中,我们认为对老鼠的研究可能有助于解决与“发现时代”相关的历史不确定性问题。