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Genetic signatures of intermediate divergence: population history of Old and New World Holarctic ravens (Corvus corax).
Mol Ecol. 2006 Mar; 15(3):795-808.ME

Abstract

Many studies of phylogeography, speciation, and species limits restrict their focus to a narrow issue: gene tree monophyly. However, reciprocal monophyly does not provide an ideal touchstone criterion of any aspect of evolutionary divergence. There is a continuum of divergence stages as isolated populations go from initial allele frequency differences to well-differentiated species. Studying intermediate stages of divergence will increase our understanding of geographical speciation, species limits, and conservation priorities. We develop a conceptual framework and terminology for thinking about the stages of 'intermediate polyphyly'. The Holarctic clade of common ravens (Corvus corax), found throughout much of Eurasia and North America, provides a case study of these stages of intermediate divergence. We used coalescent, phylogenetic, and population genetic methods to investigate the history and current status of this Old World-New World distribution using 107 mitochondrial control region sequences. Phylogenetically, New World and Old World samples are intermixed. However, most samples are grouped into small subclades that are restricted to either the New World or the Old World, and only one haplotype is shared between the hemispheres. Analysis of moleculalr variance (amova) results reflect this low haplotype sharing between hemispheres (Phi(ST) = 0.13, P < 0.01). Isolation with Migration (im) coalescent results suggest a sustained period of divergence between the hemispheres and low levels of maternal gene flow. Although there has not been sufficient time to evolve reciprocal monophyly and some gene flow may occur, New World and Old World ravens are genetically quite distinct. We use this example to demonstrate these early stages of divergence as populations go from sharing only internal haplotypes, to sharing no haplotypes, to having population specific subclades. Studies of phylogeography, speciation and systematics will benefit from increased attention to these stages of intermediate polyphyly.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Biological Sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 21250, USA. omland@umbc.eduNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16499703

Citation

Omland, Kevin E., et al. "Genetic Signatures of Intermediate Divergence: Population History of Old and New World Holarctic Ravens (Corvus Corax)." Molecular Ecology, vol. 15, no. 3, 2006, pp. 795-808.
Omland KE, Baker JM, Peters JL. Genetic signatures of intermediate divergence: population history of Old and New World Holarctic ravens (Corvus corax). Mol Ecol. 2006;15(3):795-808.
Omland, K. E., Baker, J. M., & Peters, J. L. (2006). Genetic signatures of intermediate divergence: population history of Old and New World Holarctic ravens (Corvus corax). Molecular Ecology, 15(3), 795-808.
Omland KE, Baker JM, Peters JL. Genetic Signatures of Intermediate Divergence: Population History of Old and New World Holarctic Ravens (Corvus Corax). Mol Ecol. 2006;15(3):795-808. PubMed PMID: 16499703.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Genetic signatures of intermediate divergence: population history of Old and New World Holarctic ravens (Corvus corax). AU - Omland,Kevin E, AU - Baker,Jason M, AU - Peters,Jeffrey L, PY - 2006/2/28/pubmed PY - 2006/4/25/medline PY - 2006/2/28/entrez SP - 795 EP - 808 JF - Molecular ecology JO - Mol Ecol VL - 15 IS - 3 N2 - Many studies of phylogeography, speciation, and species limits restrict their focus to a narrow issue: gene tree monophyly. However, reciprocal monophyly does not provide an ideal touchstone criterion of any aspect of evolutionary divergence. There is a continuum of divergence stages as isolated populations go from initial allele frequency differences to well-differentiated species. Studying intermediate stages of divergence will increase our understanding of geographical speciation, species limits, and conservation priorities. We develop a conceptual framework and terminology for thinking about the stages of 'intermediate polyphyly'. The Holarctic clade of common ravens (Corvus corax), found throughout much of Eurasia and North America, provides a case study of these stages of intermediate divergence. We used coalescent, phylogenetic, and population genetic methods to investigate the history and current status of this Old World-New World distribution using 107 mitochondrial control region sequences. Phylogenetically, New World and Old World samples are intermixed. However, most samples are grouped into small subclades that are restricted to either the New World or the Old World, and only one haplotype is shared between the hemispheres. Analysis of moleculalr variance (amova) results reflect this low haplotype sharing between hemispheres (Phi(ST) = 0.13, P < 0.01). Isolation with Migration (im) coalescent results suggest a sustained period of divergence between the hemispheres and low levels of maternal gene flow. Although there has not been sufficient time to evolve reciprocal monophyly and some gene flow may occur, New World and Old World ravens are genetically quite distinct. We use this example to demonstrate these early stages of divergence as populations go from sharing only internal haplotypes, to sharing no haplotypes, to having population specific subclades. Studies of phylogeography, speciation and systematics will benefit from increased attention to these stages of intermediate polyphyly. SN - 0962-1083 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16499703/Genetic_signatures_of_intermediate_divergence:_population_history_of_Old_and_New_World_Holarctic_ravens__Corvus_corax__ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -