We reconstruct range-wide phylogeographies of two widespread and largely co-occurring Western Palearctic frogs, Rana temporaria and R. dalmatina. Based on tissue or saliva samples of over 1000 individuals, we compare a variety of genetic marker systems, including mitochondrial DNA, single-copy protein-coding nuclear genes, microsatellite loci, and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of transcriptomes of both species. The two focal species differ radically in their phylogeographic structure, with R. temporaria being strongly variable among and within populations, and R. dalmatina homogeneous across Europe with a single strongly differentiated population in southern Italy. These differences were observed across the various markers studied, including microsatellites and SNP density, but especially in protein-coding nuclear genes where R. dalmatina had extremely low heterozygosity values across its range, including potential refugial areas. On the contrary, R. temporaria had comparably high range-wide values, including many areas of probable postglacial colonization. A phylogeny of R. temporaria based on various concatenated mtDNA genes revealed that two haplotype clades endemic to Iberia form a paraphyletic group at the base of the cladogram, and all other haplotypes form a monophyletic group, in agreement with an Iberian origin of the species. Demographic analysis suggests that R. temporaria and R. dalmatina have genealogies of roughly the same time to coalescence (TMRCA ~3.5. mya for both species), but R. temporaria might have been characterized by larger ancestral and current effective population sizes than R. dalmatina. The high genetic variation in R. temporaria can therefore be explained by its early range expansion out of Iberia, with subsequent cycles of differentiation in cryptic glacial refugial areas followed by admixture, while the range expansion of R. dalmatina into central Europe is a probably more recent event.

Radically different phylogeographies and patterns of genetic variation in two European brown frogs, genus Rana / M. Vences, J. Susanne Hauswaldt, S. Steinfartz, O. Rupp, A. Goesmann, S. Künzel, P. Orozco-terWengel, D.R. Vieites, S. Nieto-Roman, S. Haas, C. Laugsch, M. Gehara, S. Bruchmann, M. Pabijan, A. Ludewig, D. Rudert, C. Angelini, L.J. Borkin, P. Crochet, A. Crottini, A. Dubois, G.F. Ficetola, P. Galán, P. Geniez, M. Hachtel, O. Jovanovic, S.N. Litvinchuk, P. Lymberakis, A. Ohler, N.A. Smirnov. - In: MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION. - ISSN 1055-7903. - 68:3(2013), pp. 657-670.

Radically different phylogeographies and patterns of genetic variation in two European brown frogs, genus Rana

A. Crottini;G.F. Ficetola;
2013

Abstract

We reconstruct range-wide phylogeographies of two widespread and largely co-occurring Western Palearctic frogs, Rana temporaria and R. dalmatina. Based on tissue or saliva samples of over 1000 individuals, we compare a variety of genetic marker systems, including mitochondrial DNA, single-copy protein-coding nuclear genes, microsatellite loci, and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of transcriptomes of both species. The two focal species differ radically in their phylogeographic structure, with R. temporaria being strongly variable among and within populations, and R. dalmatina homogeneous across Europe with a single strongly differentiated population in southern Italy. These differences were observed across the various markers studied, including microsatellites and SNP density, but especially in protein-coding nuclear genes where R. dalmatina had extremely low heterozygosity values across its range, including potential refugial areas. On the contrary, R. temporaria had comparably high range-wide values, including many areas of probable postglacial colonization. A phylogeny of R. temporaria based on various concatenated mtDNA genes revealed that two haplotype clades endemic to Iberia form a paraphyletic group at the base of the cladogram, and all other haplotypes form a monophyletic group, in agreement with an Iberian origin of the species. Demographic analysis suggests that R. temporaria and R. dalmatina have genealogies of roughly the same time to coalescence (TMRCA ~3.5. mya for both species), but R. temporaria might have been characterized by larger ancestral and current effective population sizes than R. dalmatina. The high genetic variation in R. temporaria can therefore be explained by its early range expansion out of Iberia, with subsequent cycles of differentiation in cryptic glacial refugial areas followed by admixture, while the range expansion of R. dalmatina into central Europe is a probably more recent event.
English
Amphibia; Genetic variation; Palearctic; Phylogeography; Rana dalmatina; Rana temporaria; Animals; Anura; DNA, Mitochondrial; Environment; Genetics, Population; Microsatellite Repeats; Molecular Sequence Data; Multilocus Sequence Typing; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Transcriptome; Genetic Variation; Phylogeny; Phylogeography; Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics; Molecular Biology; Genetics
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2013
Elsevier
68
3
657
670
14
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Radically different phylogeographies and patterns of genetic variation in two European brown frogs, genus Rana / M. Vences, J. Susanne Hauswaldt, S. Steinfartz, O. Rupp, A. Goesmann, S. Künzel, P. Orozco-terWengel, D.R. Vieites, S. Nieto-Roman, S. Haas, C. Laugsch, M. Gehara, S. Bruchmann, M. Pabijan, A. Ludewig, D. Rudert, C. Angelini, L.J. Borkin, P. Crochet, A. Crottini, A. Dubois, G.F. Ficetola, P. Galán, P. Geniez, M. Hachtel, O. Jovanovic, S.N. Litvinchuk, P. Lymberakis, A. Ohler, N.A. Smirnov. - In: MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION. - ISSN 1055-7903. - 68:3(2013), pp. 657-670.
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Article (author)
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M. Vences, J. Susanne Hauswaldt, S. Steinfartz, O. Rupp, A. Goesmann, S. Künzel, P. Orozco-terWengel, D.R. Vieites, S. Nieto-Roman, S. Haas, C. Laugsch, M. Gehara, S. Bruchmann, M. Pabijan, A. Ludewig, D. Rudert, C. Angelini, L.J. Borkin, P. Crochet, A. Crottini, A. Dubois, G.F. Ficetola, P. Galán, P. Geniez, M. Hachtel, O. Jovanovic, S.N. Litvinchuk, P. Lymberakis, A. Ohler, N.A. Smirnov
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/455666
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