Beringia : Intercontinental exchange and diversification of high latitude mammals and their parasites during the Pliocene and Quaternary
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概要
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Beringia is the region spanning eastern Asia and northwestern North America that remained ice-free during the full glacial events of the Pleistocene. Numerous questions persist regarding the importance of this region in the evolution of northern faunas. Beringia has been implicated as both a high latitude refugium and as the crossroads (Bering Land Bridge) of the northern continents for boreal mammals. The Beringian Coevolution Project (BCP) is an international collaboration that has provided material to assess the pattern and timing of faunal exchange across the crossroads of the northern continents and the potential impact of past climatic events on differentiation. Mammals and associated parasite specimens have been collected and preserved from more than 200 field sites in eastern Russia, Alaska and northwestern Canada since 1999. Previously, fossils and taxonomic comparisons between Asia and North America mammals have shed light on these events. Molecular phylogenetics based on BCP specimens is now being used to trace the history of faunal exchange and diversification. We have found substantial phylogeographic structure in the Arctic and in Beringia in mustelid carnivores, arvicoline rodents, arctic hares and soricine shrews, including spatially concordant clades and contact zones across taxa that correspond to the edges of Beringia. Among the tapeworms of these mammalian hosts, new perspectives on diversity have also been developed. Arostrilepis horrida (Hymenolepididae) was considered to represent a single widespread and morphologically variable species occurring in a diversity of voles and lemmings in eastern and western Beringia and more broadly across the Holarctic region. The BCP has demonstrated a complex of at least 10 species that are poorly differentiated morphologically. The diversity of Paranoplocephala spp. and Anolocephaloides spp. (Anoplocephalidae) in Beringia included relatively few widespread and morphologically variable species in arvicolines. BCP collections have changed this perspective, allowing the recognition of a series of highly endemic species of Paranoplocephala that demonstrate very narrow host specificity, and additional species complexes among arvicolines. Thus, extensive, previously unrecognized, diversity for tapeworms of 2 major families characterizes the Beringian fauna. By elucidating evolutionary relationships and phylogeographic variation among populations, species and assemblages, refined views of the sequence and timing of biotic expansion, geographic colonization and impact of episodic climate change have been developed for Beringia. Ultimately, Beringia was a determining factor in the structure and biogeography of terrestrial faunas across the Nearctic and Neotropical regions during the Pliocene and Quaternary.
- 2005-12-01
著者
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DOKUCHAEV Nikolai
Institute of Biological Problems of the North
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Koehler Anson
Museum Of Southwestern Biology University Of New Mexico
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COOK Joseph
Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico
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HOBERG Eric
US National Parasite Collection & Animal Parasitic Disease Laboratory, USDA, Agricultural Research S
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HENTTONEN Heikki
Vantaa Research Centre Finnish Forest Research Institute
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WICKSTROM Lotta
Vantaa Research Centre Finnish Forest Research Institute
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HAUKISALMI Voitto
Vantaa Research Centre Finnish Forest Research Institute
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GALBREATH Kurt
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University
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CHERNYAVSKI Felix
Institute of Biological Problems of the North
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LAHZUHTKIN Anatoli
Institute of Biological Problems of the North
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MACDONALD Stephen
Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico
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HOPE Andrew
Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico
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WALTARI Eric
Biology Department, Idaho State University
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RUNCK Amy
Biology Department, Idaho State University
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VEITCH Alasdair
Environment and Natural Resources Government of the NWT
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POPKO Richard
Environment and Natural Resources Government of the NWT
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JENKINS Emily
Canadian Wildlife Service
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KUTZ Susan
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary
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ECKERLIN Ralph
Northern Virginia Community College
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Runck Amy
Biology Department Idaho State University
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Kutz Susan
Faculty Of Veterinary Medicine University Of Calgary
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Hope Andrew
Museum Of Southwestern Biology University Of New Mexico
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Hoberg Eric
Us National Parasite Collection & Animal Parasitic Disease Laboratory Usda Agricultural Research
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Cook Joseph
Museum Of Southwestern Biology University Of New Mexico
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Waltari Eric
Biology Department Idaho State University
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Galbreath Kurt
Ecology And Evolutionary Biology Cornell University
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Macdonald Stephen
Museum Of Southwestern Biology University Of New Mexico
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Dokuchaev Nikolai
Institute Of Biological Problems Of The North Feb Ras
関連論文
- Morphometric status of shrews of the Sorex caecutiens/shinto group in Japan
- Biogeographical History of Northeastern Asiatic Soricine Shrews (Insectivora, Mammalia)
- Phylogeny of Eurasian soricine shrews (Insectivora, Mammalia) inferred from the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene sequences
- Beringia : Intercontinental exchange and diversification of high latitude mammals and their parasites during the Pliocene and Quaternary
- Reexamination of Fossil Shrews (Sorex spp.) from the Middle Pleistocene of Honshu Island, Japan
- Mitochondrial DNA data reveal cryptic species within Taenia krabbei
- Intraspecific phylogeny and nucleotide diversity of the least shrews, the Sorex minutissimus-S. yukonicus complex, based on nucleotide sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene and the control region