Zhi L, Karesh W B, Janczewski D N, Frazier-Taylor H, Sajuthi D, Gombek F, Andau M, Martenson J S, O'Brien S J
Laboratory of Genomic Diversity, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Maryland 21702-1201, USA.
Curr Biol. 1996 Oct 1;6(10):1326-36. doi: 10.1016/s0960-9822(02)70719-7.
Orang-utans exist today in small isolated populations on the islands of Borneo (subspecies Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus) and Sumatra (subspecies P. p. abelii). Although, on the basis of their morphological, behavioral and cytogenetical characteristics, the Bornean and Sumatran orang-utan populations are generally considered as two separate subspecies, there is no universal agreement as to whether their genetic differentiation is sufficient to consider and manage them as species, subspecies or population level taxonomic units. A more precise phylogenetic description would affect many conservation management decisions about captive and free-ranging orang-utans.
We analyzed the amount and patterns of molecular genetic variation in orang-utan populations using cellular DNA from orang-utans from two locations in Sumatra and nine locations-representing four isolated populations-in Borneo. Genetic and phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial DNA restriction fragment length polymorphisms, nuclear minisatellite (or variable number tandem repeat) loci and mitochondrial 16S ribosomal RNA sequences led to three major findings. First, the genetic distance and phylogenetic differentiation between Sumatran and Bornean orang-utans is large, greater than that between the common chimpanzee, Pan troglodytes, and the pygmy chimpanzee or bonobo, Pan paniscus. The genetic distance suggests that the two island subspecies diverged approximately 1.5-1.7 million years ago, well before the two islands separated and long enough for species-level differentiation. Second, there is considerable endemic genetic diversity within the Bornean and Sumatran orang-utan populations, suggesting that they have not experienced recent bottlenecks or founder effects. And third, there is little genetic differentiation among four geographically isolated populations of Bornean orang-utans, consistent with gene flow having occurred between them until recently.
Our results are consistent with the view that the genetic differentiation between Sumatran and Bornean orang-utans has reached the level of distinct species. Furthermore, our findings indicate that there is not a genetic imperative for the separate management of geographically isolated Bornean populations.
如今,红毛猩猩仅存于婆罗洲岛(亚种为婆罗洲猩猩指名亚种)和苏门答腊岛(亚种为苏门答腊猩猩)上一些相互隔离的小种群中。尽管基于形态学、行为学和细胞遗传学特征,婆罗洲和苏门答腊的红毛猩猩种群通常被视为两个独立的亚种,但对于它们的遗传分化是否足以将其视为物种、亚种或种群水平的分类单元,尚无普遍共识。更精确的系统发育描述将影响许多关于圈养和野生红毛猩猩的保护管理决策。
我们使用来自苏门答腊两个地点以及婆罗洲九个地点(代表四个隔离种群)的红毛猩猩细胞DNA,分析了红毛猩猩种群中的分子遗传变异数量和模式。对线粒体DNA限制性片段长度多态性、核微卫星(或可变数目串联重复)位点以及线粒体16S核糖体RNA序列进行遗传和系统发育分析,得出了三个主要发现。第一,苏门答腊和婆罗洲红毛猩猩之间的遗传距离和系统发育分化很大,大于普通黑猩猩(黑猩猩)与倭黑猩猩(矮黑猩猩)之间的遗传距离。遗传距离表明,这两个岛屿亚种大约在150万至170万年前就已分化,远早于这两个岛屿分离的时间,且分化时间足够长,达到了物种水平的分化。第二,婆罗洲和苏门答腊红毛猩猩种群内部存在相当数量的特有遗传多样性,这表明它们近期没有经历瓶颈效应或奠基者效应。第三,婆罗洲四个地理隔离种群之间几乎没有遗传分化,这与它们直到最近仍存在基因流动的情况一致。
我们的结果与苏门答腊和婆罗洲红毛猩猩之间的遗传分化已达到不同物种水平的观点一致。此外,我们的研究结果表明,对地理隔离的婆罗洲种群进行单独管理并无遗传上的必要性。