Dietmar Zinner, Dereje Tesfaye, Nils C Stenseth, Afework Bekele, Aemro Mekonnen, Steve Doeschner, Anagaw Atickem, Christian Roos
{"title":"斑点疣是埃塞俄比亚一个有效的地方性分类群吗?","authors":"Dietmar Zinner, Dereje Tesfaye, Nils C Stenseth, Afework Bekele, Aemro Mekonnen, Steve Doeschner, Anagaw Atickem, Christian Roos","doi":"10.5194/pb-6-7-2019","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Black-and-white colobus (<i>Colobus guereza</i> Rüppell, 1835) are arboreal Old World monkeys inhabiting large parts of the deciduous and evergreen forests of sub-Saharan Africa. Two of the eight subspecies of <i>Colobus guereza</i> are endemic to Ethiopia: <i>C. g. gallarum</i> and <i>C. g. guereza</i>. However, the validity of the Ethiopian taxa is debated and observed morphological differences were attributed to clinal variation within <i>C. g. guereza</i>. To date, no molecular phylogeny of the Ethiopian guerezas is available to facilitate their taxonomic classification. We used mitochondrial DNA markers from 94 samples collected across Ethiopia to reconstruct a phylogeny of respective mitochondrial lineages. In our phylogenetic reconstruction, augmented by orthologous sequence information of non-Ethiopian black-and-white colobus from GenBank, we found two major Ethiopian mitochondrial clades, with one being largely congruent with the distribution of <i>C. g. guereza</i>. The second clade was found only at two locations in the eastern part of the putative range of <i>C. g. gallarum</i>. This second lineage clustered with the lowland form, <i>C. g. occidentalis</i>, from central Africa, whereas the <i>C. g. guereza</i> lineages clustered with <i>C. g. caudatus</i> and <i>C. g. kikuyuensis</i> from Kenya and northern Tanzania. These two guereza lineages diverged around 0.7 million years ago. In addition, mitochondrial sequence information does not support unequivocally a distinction of <i>C. g. caudatus</i> and <i>C. g. kikuyuensis</i>. Our findings indicate a previous biogeographic connection between the ranges of <i>C. g. occidentalis</i> and <i>C. g. gallarum</i> and a possible secondary invasion of Ethiopia by members of the <i>C. g. guereza</i>-<i>C. g. caudatus</i>-<i>C. g. kikuyuensis</i> clade. Given these phylogenetic relationships, our study supports the two-taxa hypothesis, making <i>C. g. gallarum</i> an Ethiopian endemic, and, in combination with the taxon's very restricted range, makes it one of the most endangered subspecies of black-and-white colobus.</p>","PeriodicalId":37245,"journal":{"name":"Primate Biology","volume":"6 1","pages":"7-16"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-04-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7041534/pdf/","citationCount":"15","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Is <i>Colobus guereza gallarum</i> a valid endemic Ethiopian taxon?\",\"authors\":\"Dietmar Zinner, Dereje Tesfaye, Nils C Stenseth, Afework Bekele, Aemro Mekonnen, Steve Doeschner, Anagaw Atickem, Christian Roos\",\"doi\":\"10.5194/pb-6-7-2019\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Black-and-white colobus (<i>Colobus guereza</i> Rüppell, 1835) are arboreal Old World monkeys inhabiting large parts of the deciduous and evergreen forests of sub-Saharan Africa. Two of the eight subspecies of <i>Colobus guereza</i> are endemic to Ethiopia: <i>C. g. gallarum</i> and <i>C. g. guereza</i>. However, the validity of the Ethiopian taxa is debated and observed morphological differences were attributed to clinal variation within <i>C. g. guereza</i>. To date, no molecular phylogeny of the Ethiopian guerezas is available to facilitate their taxonomic classification. We used mitochondrial DNA markers from 94 samples collected across Ethiopia to reconstruct a phylogeny of respective mitochondrial lineages. In our phylogenetic reconstruction, augmented by orthologous sequence information of non-Ethiopian black-and-white colobus from GenBank, we found two major Ethiopian mitochondrial clades, with one being largely congruent with the distribution of <i>C. g. guereza</i>. The second clade was found only at two locations in the eastern part of the putative range of <i>C. g. gallarum</i>. This second lineage clustered with the lowland form, <i>C. g. occidentalis</i>, from central Africa, whereas the <i>C. g. guereza</i> lineages clustered with <i>C. g. caudatus</i> and <i>C. g. kikuyuensis</i> from Kenya and northern Tanzania. These two guereza lineages diverged around 0.7 million years ago. In addition, mitochondrial sequence information does not support unequivocally a distinction of <i>C. g. caudatus</i> and <i>C. g. kikuyuensis</i>. Our findings indicate a previous biogeographic connection between the ranges of <i>C. g. occidentalis</i> and <i>C. g. gallarum</i> and a possible secondary invasion of Ethiopia by members of the <i>C. g. guereza</i>-<i>C. g. caudatus</i>-<i>C. g. kikuyuensis</i> clade. 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引用次数: 15
摘要
黑白疣猴(疣猴guereza r ppell, 1835)是旧大陆的树栖猴,栖息在撒哈拉以南非洲的大部分落叶和常绿森林中。格莱萨疣虫的八个亚种中有两个是埃塞俄比亚特有的:C. g. gallarum和C. g.格莱萨。然而,埃塞俄比亚分类群的有效性存在争议,观察到的形态差异归因于C. g. guereza的临床变异。到目前为止,还没有埃塞俄比亚格莱萨的分子系统发育来促进它们的分类分类。我们使用来自埃塞俄比亚收集的94个样本的线粒体DNA标记来重建各自线粒体谱系的系统发育。在我们的系统发育重建中,利用来自GenBank的非埃塞俄比亚黑白疣体的同源序列信息,我们发现了两个主要的埃塞俄比亚线粒体分支,其中一个与C. g. guereza的分布基本一致。第二个分支只在假定的C. g. gallarum范围东部的两个地方被发现。第二种谱系与来自中非的低地物种C. g. occidentalis聚集在一起,而C. g. guereza谱系与来自肯尼亚和坦桑尼亚北部的C. g. caudatus和C. g. kikuyuensis聚集在一起。这两种格莱萨血统大约在70万年前分化。此外,线粒体序列信息并不能明确地支持C. g. caudatus和C. g. kikuyuensis的区别。我们的研究结果表明,C. g. occidentalis和C. g. gallarum的分布范围与C. g. guereza-C的成员可能二次入侵埃塞俄比亚之间存在先前的生物地理联系。g . caudatus-C。基库尤氏支。考虑到这些系统发育关系,我们的研究支持了两个分类群的假设,使C. g. gallarum成为埃塞俄比亚特有的,并且,结合分类群非常有限的范围,使其成为黑白疣子中最濒危的亚种之一。
Is Colobus guereza gallarum a valid endemic Ethiopian taxon?
Black-and-white colobus (Colobus guereza Rüppell, 1835) are arboreal Old World monkeys inhabiting large parts of the deciduous and evergreen forests of sub-Saharan Africa. Two of the eight subspecies of Colobus guereza are endemic to Ethiopia: C. g. gallarum and C. g. guereza. However, the validity of the Ethiopian taxa is debated and observed morphological differences were attributed to clinal variation within C. g. guereza. To date, no molecular phylogeny of the Ethiopian guerezas is available to facilitate their taxonomic classification. We used mitochondrial DNA markers from 94 samples collected across Ethiopia to reconstruct a phylogeny of respective mitochondrial lineages. In our phylogenetic reconstruction, augmented by orthologous sequence information of non-Ethiopian black-and-white colobus from GenBank, we found two major Ethiopian mitochondrial clades, with one being largely congruent with the distribution of C. g. guereza. The second clade was found only at two locations in the eastern part of the putative range of C. g. gallarum. This second lineage clustered with the lowland form, C. g. occidentalis, from central Africa, whereas the C. g. guereza lineages clustered with C. g. caudatus and C. g. kikuyuensis from Kenya and northern Tanzania. These two guereza lineages diverged around 0.7 million years ago. In addition, mitochondrial sequence information does not support unequivocally a distinction of C. g. caudatus and C. g. kikuyuensis. Our findings indicate a previous biogeographic connection between the ranges of C. g. occidentalis and C. g. gallarum and a possible secondary invasion of Ethiopia by members of the C. g. guereza-C. g. caudatus-C. g. kikuyuensis clade. Given these phylogenetic relationships, our study supports the two-taxa hypothesis, making C. g. gallarum an Ethiopian endemic, and, in combination with the taxon's very restricted range, makes it one of the most endangered subspecies of black-and-white colobus.