Yoder Anne D, Campbell C Ryan, Blanco Marina B, Dos Reis Mario, Ganzhorn Jörg U, Goodman Steven M, Hunnicutt Kelsie E, Larsen Peter A, Kappeler Peter M, Rasoloarison Rodin M, Ralison José M, Swofford David L, Weisrock David W
Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708; Duke Lemur Center, Duke University, Durham, NC 27705;
Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Jul 19;113(29):8049-56. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1601081113.
Phylogeographic analysis can be described as the study of the geological and climatological processes that have produced contemporary geographic distributions of populations and species. Here, we attempt to understand how the dynamic process of landscape change on Madagascar has shaped the distribution of a targeted clade of mouse lemurs (genus Microcebus) and, conversely, how phylogenetic and population genetic patterns in these small primates can reciprocally advance our understanding of Madagascar's prehuman environment. The degree to which human activity has impacted the natural plant communities of Madagascar is of critical and enduring interest. Today, the eastern rainforests are separated from the dry deciduous forests of the west by a large expanse of presumed anthropogenic grassland savanna, dominated by the Family Poaceae, that blankets most of the Central Highlands. Although there is firm consensus that anthropogenic activities have transformed the original vegetation through agricultural and pastoral practices, the degree to which closed-canopy forest extended from the east to the west remains debated. Phylogenetic and population genetic patterns in a five-species clade of mouse lemurs suggest that longitudinal dispersal across the island was readily achieved throughout the Pleistocene, apparently ending at ∼55 ka. By examining patterns of both inter- and intraspecific genetic diversity in mouse lemur species found in the eastern, western, and Central Highland zones, we conclude that the natural environment of the Central Highlands would have been mosaic, consisting of a matrix of wooded savanna that formed a transitional zone between the extremes of humid eastern and dry western forest types.
系统发育地理学分析可以被描述为对导致种群和物种当代地理分布的地质和气候过程的研究。在此,我们试图了解马达加斯加景观变化的动态过程如何塑造了鼠狐猴(Microcebus属)一个目标分支的分布,反之,这些小型灵长类动物的系统发育和种群遗传模式如何反过来增进我们对马达加斯加人类出现之前环境的理解。人类活动对马达加斯加自然植物群落的影响程度一直是至关重要且持久的研究兴趣点。如今,东部雨林与西部干燥的落叶林被一大片推测为人为形成的草原分隔开来,这片草原以禾本科为主,覆盖了大部分中央高原。尽管人们普遍认为人类活动通过农业和畜牧业改变了原始植被,但封闭树冠森林从东部延伸到西部的程度仍存在争议。对一个包含五个物种的鼠狐猴分支的系统发育和种群遗传模式研究表明,在整个更新世期间,该岛屿上的纵向扩散很容易实现,显然在约55000年前结束。通过研究在东部、西部和中央高原地区发现的鼠狐猴物种的种间和种内遗传多样性模式,我们得出结论,中央高原的自然环境可能是镶嵌式的,由树木繁茂的稀树草原组成,形成了潮湿的东部森林类型和干燥的西部森林类型这两种极端环境之间的过渡带。