期刊
JOURNAL OF MAMMALIAN EVOLUTION
卷 27, 期 4, 页码 723-743出版社
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10914-019-09478-5
关键词
Lepus; Craniometry; Transferrin; Cytb; Introgression; Niche modeling
Hares from Iran can be divided into three morphological groups, withLepus europaeusinhabiting the western parts of Iran. Hares from lowland areas along the southeastern corner of the Caspian Sea are morphologically similar to bothL. tolaiandL. tibetanus, but diagnosis is complicated by a lack of taxonomic agreement. Mitochondrial DNA suggestsL. tibetanusrather thanL. tolai, although comparative material is not incontestable. The third group, in more xeric habitats of eastern Iran, shows a mixture of traits characteristic of both the west IranianL. europaeusand the Golestan population, the southeast Caspian Sea. Mitochondrial and nuclear loci reveal conflicting patterns, where hares from eastern Iran cluster withL. europaeusbased on mtDNA, but with the Golestan population based on nuclear transferrin, suggesting a mixed ancestry. Ecological niche modeling indicates that the preferred habitat of the Golestan population is more restricted than that of the other two groups. PureL. europaeusoccur in areas of high seasonality, low temperature, and high precipitation, whereas the population in eastern Iran inhabits areas characterized by high contrast in daily temperatures and the highest isothermality in eastern Iran. Parts of the range of this population are also indicated to correspond to the fundamental niche ofL. europaeus, yet both parental forms appear to be absent from this area occupied by individuals of apparent mixed ancestry. This suggests that the population of mixed ancestry may have selective advantages over the parental forms, and that the absence of the latter from this area may be due to competitive exclusion. As the population of mixed ancestry thus appears to be self-sustaining, incipient speciation of a stabilized hybrid may be implied.
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