Hofman Courtney A, Rick Torben C, Hawkins Melissa T R, Funk W Chris, Ralls Katherine, Boser Christina L, Collins Paul W, Coonan Tim, King Julie L, Morrison Scott A, Newsome Seth D, Sillett T Scott, Fleischer Robert C, Maldonado Jesus E
Department of Anthropology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, United States of America; Program in Human Ecology and Archaeobiology, Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America; Center for Conservation and Evolutionary Genetics, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, National Zoological Park, Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America.
Program in Human Ecology and Archaeobiology, Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Feb 25;10(2):e0118240. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0118240. eCollection 2015.
Island endemics are typically differentiated from their mainland progenitors in behavior, morphology, and genetics, often resulting from long-term evolutionary change. To examine mechanisms for the origins of island endemism, we present a phylogeographic analysis of whole mitochondrial genomes from the endangered island fox (Urocyon littoralis), endemic to California's Channel Islands, and mainland gray foxes (U. cinereoargenteus). Previous genetic studies suggested that foxes first appeared on the islands >16,000 years ago, before human arrival (~13,000 cal BP), while archaeological and paleontological data supported a colonization >7000 cal BP. Our results are consistent with initial fox colonization of the northern islands probably by rafting or human introduction ~9200-7100 years ago, followed quickly by human translocation of foxes from the northern to southern Channel Islands. Mitogenomes indicate that island foxes are monophyletic and most closely related to gray foxes from northern California that likely experienced a Holocene climate-induced range shift. Our data document rapid morphological evolution of island foxes (in ~2000 years or less). Despite evidence for bottlenecks, island foxes have generated and maintained multiple mitochondrial haplotypes. This study highlights the intertwined evolutionary history of island foxes and humans, and illustrates a new approach for investigating the evolutionary histories of other island endemics.
岛屿特有物种通常在行为、形态和基因方面与其大陆祖先有所不同,这往往是长期进化变化的结果。为了探究岛屿特有现象的起源机制,我们对濒危的岛屿灰狐(Urocyon littoralis,加利福尼亚海峡群岛的特有物种)和大陆灰狐(U. cinereoargenteus)的整个线粒体基因组进行了系统地理学分析。先前的基因研究表明,狐狸在超过16000年前首次出现在这些岛屿上,早于人类到达的时间(约公元前13000年),而考古和古生物学数据则支持在公元前7000年之后的殖民化。我们的结果与以下情况一致:大约在9200 - 7100年前,狐狸可能通过漂流或人类引入首次在北部岛屿上殖民,随后很快被人类从北海峡群岛转移到南海峡群岛。线粒体基因组表明,岛屿灰狐是单系的,并且与来自加利福尼亚北部的灰狐关系最为密切,这些灰狐可能经历了全新世气候导致的分布范围变化。我们的数据记录了岛屿灰狐在大约2000年或更短时间内的快速形态进化。尽管有证据表明存在瓶颈效应,但岛屿灰狐产生并维持了多种线粒体单倍型。这项研究突出了岛屿灰狐与人类相互交织的进化历史,并展示了一种研究其他岛屿特有物种进化历史的新方法。