Is evolution of blind mole rats determined by climate oscillations?

The concept of climate variability facilitating adaptive radiation supported by the "Court Jester" hypothesis is disputed by the "Red Queen" one, but the prevalence of one or the other might be scale-dependent. We report on a detailed, comprehensive phylo-geographic study on the...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yarin Hadid, Attila Németh, Sagi Snir, Tomáš Pavlíček, Gábor Csorba, Miklós Kázmér, Agnes Major, Sergey Mezhzherin, Mikhail Rusin, Yüksel Coşkun, Eviatar Nevo
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012
Materias:
R
Q
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/de25329ce53c4aa181c2c22330e8439d
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:de25329ce53c4aa181c2c22330e8439d
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:de25329ce53c4aa181c2c22330e8439d2021-11-18T07:30:41ZIs evolution of blind mole rats determined by climate oscillations?1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0030043https://doaj.org/article/de25329ce53c4aa181c2c22330e8439d2012-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22253871/?tool=EBIhttps://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203The concept of climate variability facilitating adaptive radiation supported by the "Court Jester" hypothesis is disputed by the "Red Queen" one, but the prevalence of one or the other might be scale-dependent. We report on a detailed, comprehensive phylo-geographic study on the ∼4 kb mtDNA sequence in underground blind mole rats of the family Spalacidae (or subfamily Spalacinae) from the East Mediterranean steppes. Our study aimed at testing the presence of periodicities in branching patterns on a constructed phylogenetic tree and at searching for congruence between branching events, tectonic history and paleoclimates. In contrast to the strong support for the majority of the branching events on the tree, the absence of support in a few instances indicates that network-like evolution could exist in spalacids. In our tree, robust support was given, in concordance with paleontological data, for the separation of spalacids from muroid rodents during the first half of the Miocene when open, grass-dominated habitats were established. Marine barriers formed between Anatolia and the Balkans could have facilitated the separation of the lineage "Spalax" from the lineage "Nannospalax" and of the clade "leucodon" from the clade "xanthodon". The separation of the clade "ehrenbergi" occurred during the late stages of the tectonically induced uplift of the Anatolian high plateaus and mountains, whereas the separation of the clade "vasvarii" took place when the rapidly uplifting Taurus mountain range prevented the Mediterranean rainfalls from reaching the Central Anatolian Plateau. The separation of Spalax antiquus and S. graecus occurred when the southeastern Carpathians were uplifted. Despite the role played by tectonic events, branching events that show periodicity corresponding to 400-kyr and 100-kyr eccentricity bands illuminate the important role of orbital fluctuations on adaptive radiation in spalacids. At the given scale, our results supports the "Court Jester" hypothesis over the "Red Queen" one.Yarin HadidAttila NémethSagi SnirTomáš PavlíčekGábor CsorbaMiklós KázmérAgnes MajorSergey MezhzherinMikhail RusinYüksel CoşkunEviatar NevoPublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 7, Iss 1, p e30043 (2012)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Yarin Hadid
Attila Németh
Sagi Snir
Tomáš Pavlíček
Gábor Csorba
Miklós Kázmér
Agnes Major
Sergey Mezhzherin
Mikhail Rusin
Yüksel Coşkun
Eviatar Nevo
Is evolution of blind mole rats determined by climate oscillations?
description The concept of climate variability facilitating adaptive radiation supported by the "Court Jester" hypothesis is disputed by the "Red Queen" one, but the prevalence of one or the other might be scale-dependent. We report on a detailed, comprehensive phylo-geographic study on the ∼4 kb mtDNA sequence in underground blind mole rats of the family Spalacidae (or subfamily Spalacinae) from the East Mediterranean steppes. Our study aimed at testing the presence of periodicities in branching patterns on a constructed phylogenetic tree and at searching for congruence between branching events, tectonic history and paleoclimates. In contrast to the strong support for the majority of the branching events on the tree, the absence of support in a few instances indicates that network-like evolution could exist in spalacids. In our tree, robust support was given, in concordance with paleontological data, for the separation of spalacids from muroid rodents during the first half of the Miocene when open, grass-dominated habitats were established. Marine barriers formed between Anatolia and the Balkans could have facilitated the separation of the lineage "Spalax" from the lineage "Nannospalax" and of the clade "leucodon" from the clade "xanthodon". The separation of the clade "ehrenbergi" occurred during the late stages of the tectonically induced uplift of the Anatolian high plateaus and mountains, whereas the separation of the clade "vasvarii" took place when the rapidly uplifting Taurus mountain range prevented the Mediterranean rainfalls from reaching the Central Anatolian Plateau. The separation of Spalax antiquus and S. graecus occurred when the southeastern Carpathians were uplifted. Despite the role played by tectonic events, branching events that show periodicity corresponding to 400-kyr and 100-kyr eccentricity bands illuminate the important role of orbital fluctuations on adaptive radiation in spalacids. At the given scale, our results supports the "Court Jester" hypothesis over the "Red Queen" one.
format article
author Yarin Hadid
Attila Németh
Sagi Snir
Tomáš Pavlíček
Gábor Csorba
Miklós Kázmér
Agnes Major
Sergey Mezhzherin
Mikhail Rusin
Yüksel Coşkun
Eviatar Nevo
author_facet Yarin Hadid
Attila Németh
Sagi Snir
Tomáš Pavlíček
Gábor Csorba
Miklós Kázmér
Agnes Major
Sergey Mezhzherin
Mikhail Rusin
Yüksel Coşkun
Eviatar Nevo
author_sort Yarin Hadid
title Is evolution of blind mole rats determined by climate oscillations?
title_short Is evolution of blind mole rats determined by climate oscillations?
title_full Is evolution of blind mole rats determined by climate oscillations?
title_fullStr Is evolution of blind mole rats determined by climate oscillations?
title_full_unstemmed Is evolution of blind mole rats determined by climate oscillations?
title_sort is evolution of blind mole rats determined by climate oscillations?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2012
url https://doaj.org/article/de25329ce53c4aa181c2c22330e8439d
work_keys_str_mv AT yarinhadid isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT attilanemeth isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT sagisnir isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT tomaspavlicek isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT gaborcsorba isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT mikloskazmer isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT agnesmajor isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT sergeymezhzherin isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT mikhailrusin isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT yukselcoskun isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
AT eviatarnevo isevolutionofblindmoleratsdeterminedbyclimateoscillations
_version_ 1718423381358936064