Journal
PARASITOLOGY RESEARCH
Volume 113, Issue 10, Pages 3773-3779Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00436-014-4043-1
Keywords
Dermacentor everestianus; Phylogenetic status; 16S rDNAsequences; cox1 sequences
Categories
Funding
- NSFC [31101621, 31372432, 31201899, 31272556]
- NSFC, ASTIP
- NSFC, CAAS
- Creative Research Groups of Gansu Province [1210RJIA006]
- MOA [2010-S06]
- NBCIS, MOA [CARS-38]
- Special Fund for Agro-scientific Research in the Public Research, MOA [201303035, 201303037]
- 973 Program, MOST, China [2010CB530206]
- Basic Research program (CRP), MOST, China [16198/R0]
- MOST, China [2013BAD12B00]
- Specific Fund for Sino-Europe Cooperation, MOST, China
- State Key Laboratory of Veterinary Etiological Biology Project
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Dermacentor everestianus Hirst, 1926, is only reported in Northwestern China and Nepal. Few researches about this species have been involved, especially for molecular characteristics. The taxonomy studies of D.everestianus are mainly based on morphological features, and its taxonomic status is an ongoing controversy. To clarify the molecular characteristics and phylogenetic status of D.everestianus and other related species, the sequences of mitochondrial 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) and cox1 fragments were analyzed in the present study. Analysis of 16S rDNA and cox1 sequences showed 99.3-100 % identity within D.everestianus individuals, with the genetic divergence among them was 0-0.0086. The interspecific distance of 16S rDNA and cox1 between D.everestianus and some other Palaearctic species including D. silvarum, D. nuttalli, and D. marginatus was much smaller than that between D.everestianus and Nearctic Dermacentor ticks (D.albipictus, D.nitens, and D.variabilis). Such relationships of these ticks were also verified in the phylogenetic analysis. Two major clades were recovered within Dermacentor spp. with more than 90 % bootstrap support in the phylogenetic trees. D.everestianus together with D.silvarum, D.nuttalli, and D.marginatus were included in the clade I (Eurasia lineage). Other analyzed tick species including D.variabilis, D.nitens, and D.albipictus formed clade II, which are distributed in Nearctic realm. These indicated that the genus Dermacentor was at least composed of two lineages. Thus, further researches including additionally molecular markers on all Dermacentor species globally should be taken to precisely resolve relationships within Dermacentor.
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