Journal Article10.1111/MEC.12790
Conservation implications of the evolutionary history and genetic diversity hotspots of the snowshoe hare
Ellen Cheng,Karen E. Hodges,José Melo-Ferreira,Paulo C. Alves,Paulo C. Alves,L. Scott Mills,L. Scott Mills +6 more
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TL;DR: Genetic diversity was highest at mid‐latitudes of the species' range, and genetic uniqueness was greatest in southern populations, consistent with substructuring inferred from both mtDNA and microsatellite analyses at finer levels of analysis.
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Abstract: With climate warming, the ranges of many boreal species are expected to shift northward and to fragment in southern peripheral ranges. To understand the conservation implications of losing southern populations, we examined range-wide genetic diversity of the snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus), an important prey species that drives boreal ecosystem dynamics. We analysed microsatellite (8 loci) and mitochondrial DNA sequence (cytochrome b and control region) variation in almost 1000 snowshoe hares. A hierarchical structure analysis of the microsatellite data suggests initial subdivision in two groups, Boreal and southwestern. The southwestern group further splits into Greater Pacific Northwest and U.S. Rockies. The genealogical information retrieved from mtDNA is congruent with the three highly differentiated and divergent groups of snowshoe hares. These groups can correspond with evolutionarily significant units that might have evolved in separate refugia south and east of the Pleistocene ice sheets. Genetic diversity was highest at mid-latitudes of the species' range, and genetic uniqueness was greatest in southern populations, consistent with substructuring inferred from both mtDNA and microsatellite analyses at finer levels of analysis. Surprisingly, snowshoe hares in the Greater Pacific Northwest mtDNA lineage were more closely related to black-tailed jackrabbits (Lepus californicus) than to other snowshoe hares, which may result from secondary introgression or shared ancestral polymorphism. Given the genetic distinctiveness of southern populations and minimal gene flow with their northern neighbours, fragmentation and loss of southern boreal habitats could mean loss of many unique alleles and reduced evolutionary potential.
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Citations
Adaptive introgression underlies polymorphic seasonal camouflage in snowshoe hares
Matthew R. Jones,L. Scott Mills,L. Scott Mills,Paulo C. Alves,Paulo C. Alves,Colin M. Callahan,Joel M. Alves,Joel M. Alves,Diana J. R. Lafferty,Diana J. R. Lafferty,Diana J. R. Lafferty,Francis M. Jiggins,Jeffrey D. Jensen,Jeffrey D. Jensen,José Melo-Ferreira,Jeffrey M. Good +15 more
TL;DR: It is shown that cis-regulatory variation controlling seasonal expression of the Agouti gene underlies this adaptive winter camouflage polymorphism, and shows that introgression of genetic variants that underlie key ecological traits can seed past and ongoing adaptation to rapidly changing environments.
Eco‐evolution on the edge during climate change
TL;DR: Reconveying historical studies that measured trait frequencies, the strength of selection, or heritabilities could be an efficient way to increase eco‐evolutionary knowledge in climate change biology.
162
New England and northern New York forest ecosystem vulnerability assessment and synthesis: a report from the New England Climate Change Response Framework project
Maria K. Janowiak,Anthony W. D'Amato,Christopher W. Swanston,Louis R. Iverson,Frank R. Thompson,William D. Dijak,Stephen G. Matthews,Matthew P. Peters,Anantha Prasad,Jason Sapp Fraser,Leslie A. Brandt,Patricia R. Butler-Leopold,Stephen D. Handler,P. Danielle Shannon,Diane Burbank,John Campbell,Charles V. Cogbill,Matthew J. Duveneck,Marla R. Emery,Nicholas A. Fisichelli,Jane R. Foster,Jennifer Hushaw,Laura S. Kenefic,Amanda Mahaffey,Toni Lyn Morelli,Nicholas J. Reo,Paul G. Schaberg,K. Rogers Simmons,Aaron R. Weiskittel,Sandy Wilmot,David Y. Hollinger,Erin D. Lane,Lindsey E. Rustad,Pamela H. Templer +33 more
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