Vázquez-Miranda Hernán, Zink Robert M, Pinto Brendan J
Colección Nacional de Aves, Departamento de Zoología, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad de México C.P. 04510, Mexico.
School of Natural Resources, School of Biological Sciences, and Nebraska State Museum, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68583, USA.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2022 Jun;171:107466. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107466. Epub 2022 Mar 28.
Comparative phylogeography explores the historical congruence of co-distributed species to understand the factors that led to their current genetic and phenotypic structures. Even species that span the same biogeographic barrier can exhibit different phylogeographic structures owing to differences in effective population sizes, genetic marker bias, and dispersal abilities. The Baja California peninsula and adjacent desert regions include several biogeographic barriers, including the Vizcaíno Desert and Sierra de la Laguna (Cape District), that have left phylogeographic patterns in some but not all species. We used genome-wide SNP data to test the hypothesis that the diverse phylogeographic patterns inferred from prior studies were supported. We found that mitochondrial DNA, single nuclear gene, and genome-wide SNP data show that the cactus wren and LeConte's thrasher have a concordant historical division at or near the Vizcaíno Desert in north-central Baja California, the Gila woodpecker is at an intermediate stage of divergence, and the California gnatcatcher lacks phylogeographic structure. None of these four species are classified taxonomically in a way that captures their evolutionary history with the exception of the LeConte's thrasher. We also analyzed mtDNA data on samples of nine other species that span the Vizcaíno Desert, with four showing no apparent division, and six additional species from the Sierra de la Laguna, all but one of which are differentiated. Reasons for contrasting phylogeographic patterns among these species should be explored further with genomic data to test the extent of concordant phylogeographic patterns. The evolutionary division at the Vizcaíno desert is well known in other vertebrate species, and our study further corroborates the extent, profound effect, and importance of this biogeographic boundary. The areas north and south of the Vizcaíno Desert, which contains considerable diversity, should be recognized as historically significant areas for conservation.
比较系统地理学探究共分布物种的历史一致性,以了解导致其当前遗传和表型结构的因素。即使跨越相同生物地理障碍的物种,由于有效种群大小、遗传标记偏差和扩散能力的差异,也可能表现出不同的系统地理结构。下加利福尼亚半岛及邻近的沙漠地区包括几个生物地理障碍,如比斯卡伊诺沙漠和拉古纳山脉(海角地区),这些障碍在一些但并非所有物种中留下了系统地理模式。我们使用全基因组SNP数据来检验先前研究推断的多样系统地理模式得到支持这一假设。我们发现,线粒体DNA、单核基因和全基因组SNP数据表明,仙人掌鹪鹩和勒孔特氏鸫在巴哈加利福尼亚中北部的比斯卡伊诺沙漠或其附近有一致的历史分化,吉拉啄木鸟处于分化的中间阶段,而加利福尼亚食蜂鸟缺乏系统地理结构。除了勒孔特氏鸫外,这四个物种在分类学上的分类方式都未能反映它们的进化历史。我们还分析了跨越比斯卡伊诺沙漠的其他九个物种样本的线粒体DNA数据,其中四个没有明显分化,另外从拉古纳山脉选取的六个物种,除一个外均有分化。应利用基因组数据进一步探究这些物种间系统地理模式对比的原因,以检验系统地理模式的一致程度。比斯卡伊诺沙漠的进化分化在其他脊椎动物物种中是众所周知的,我们的研究进一步证实了这条生物地理边界的范围、深远影响和重要性。比斯卡伊诺沙漠南北区域具有相当的多样性,应被视为具有历史意义的保护区域。