Querejeta Marina, Fernández-González Angel, Romero Rafael, Castresana Jose
Institute of Evolutionary Biology (CSIC-Universitat Pompeu Fabra) Barcelona Spain.
Biosfera Consultoría Medioambiental S.L. Oviedo Spain.
Ecol Evol. 2017 May 15;7(12):4486-4495. doi: 10.1002/ece3.3034. eCollection 2017 Jun.
The genetic structure of small semiaquatic animals may be influenced by dispersal across both rivers and land. The relative importance of these two modes of dispersal may vary across different species and with ecological conditions and evolutionary periods. The Pyrenean desman () is an endemic mammal of the Iberian Peninsula with a strong phylogeographic structure and semiaquatic habits, thus making it an ideal model to study the effects of river and overland dispersal on its genetic structure. Thanks to different types of noninvasive samples, we obtained an extensive sampling of the Pyrenean desman from the northwestern region of the Iberian Peninsula and sequenced two mitochondrial DNA fragments. We then analyzed, using an isolation-by-distance approach, the correlation between phylogenetic distances and geographical distances measured along both river networks and land to infer the relative importance of river and overland dispersal. We found that the correlations in the whole area and in a large basin were consistent with an effect of overland dispersal, which may be due to the postglacial colonization of new territories using terrestrial corridors and, possibly, a more extensive fluvial network that may have been present during the Holocene. However, in a small basin, likely to be less influenced by the impact of ancient postglacial dispersal, the correlations suggested significant overall effects of both overland and river dispersal, as expected for a semiaquatic mammal. Therefore, different scales and geographical regions reflect different aspects of the evolutionary history and ecology of this semiaquatic species using this isolation-by-distance method. The results we obtained may have crucial implications for the conservation of the Pyrenean desman because they reinforce the importance of interbasin dispersal for this species in the studied area and the need to protect the whole riverine ecosystem, including rivers, upland streams and terrestrial corridors between basins.
小型半水生动物的遗传结构可能会受到跨越河流和陆地扩散的影响。这两种扩散方式的相对重要性可能因物种不同、生态条件和进化时期而异。比利牛斯水鼩鼱()是伊比利亚半岛的特有哺乳动物,具有强烈的系统地理学结构和半水生习性,因此使其成为研究河流和陆地扩散对其遗传结构影响的理想模型。借助不同类型的非侵入性样本,我们对伊比利亚半岛西北部地区的比利牛斯水鼩鼱进行了广泛采样,并对两个线粒体DNA片段进行了测序。然后,我们采用距离隔离法,分析了沿河网和陆地测量的系统发育距离与地理距离之间的相关性,以推断河流和陆地扩散的相对重要性。我们发现,整个区域和一个大流域内的相关性与陆地扩散的影响一致,这可能是由于利用陆地走廊进行的全新世后新区域的殖民化,以及可能在全新世期间存在的更广泛的河网。然而,在一个可能受古代全新世后扩散影响较小的小流域中,相关性表明陆地和河流扩散都有显著的总体影响,这正如对半水生哺乳动物所预期的那样。因此,不同的尺度和地理区域反映了使用这种距离隔离法的该半水生物种进化历史和生态的不同方面。我们获得的结果可能对比利牛斯水鼩鼱的保护具有至关重要的意义,因为它们强化了流域间扩散对该研究区域内该物种的重要性,以及保护整个河流生态系统的必要性,包括河流、高地溪流和流域之间的陆地走廊。