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Phylogeography of Chinese house mice ( Mus musculus musculus/castaneus ): distribution, routes of colonization and geographic regions of hybridization
Author(s) -
Jing Meidong,
Yu HonTsen,
Bi Xiaoxin,
Lai YungChih,
Jiang Wei,
Huang Ling
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
molecular ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.619
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1365-294X
pISSN - 0962-1083
DOI - 10.1111/mec.12873
Subject(s) - house mouse , house mice , subspecies , biology , phylogeography , population , china , phylogenetic tree , zoology , colonization , evolutionary biology , ecology , geography , genetics , demography , gene , archaeology , sociology
House mice ( Mus musculus ) are human commensals and have served as a primary model in biomedical, ecological and evolutionary research. Although there is detailed knowledge of the biogeography of house mice in Europe, little is known of the history of house mice in China, despite the fact that China encompasses an enormous portion of their range. In the present study, 535 house mice caught from 29 localities in China were studied by sequencing the mitochondrial D‐loop and genotyping 10 nuclear microsatellite markers distributed on 10 chromosomes. Phylogenetic analyses revealed two evolutionary lineages corresponding to Mus musculus castaneus and Mus musculus musculus in the south and north, respectively, with the Yangtze River approximately representing the boundary. More detailed analyses combining published sequence data from mice sampled in neighbouring countries revealed the migration routes of the two subspecies into China: M .  m .  castaneus appeared to have migrated through a southern route (Yunnan and Guangxi), whereas M .  m .  musculus entered China from Kazakhstan through the north‐west border (Xinjiang). Bayesian analysis of mitochondrial sequences indicated rapid population expansions in both subspecies, approximately 4650–9300 and 7150–14 300 years ago for M .  m .  castaneus and M .  m .  musculus , respectively. Interestingly, the migration routes of Chinese house mice coincide with the colonization routes of modern humans into China, and the expansion times of house mice are consistent with the development of agriculture in southern and northern China, respectively. Finally, our study confirmed the existence of a hybrid zone between M .  m .  castaneus and M .  m .  musculus in China. Further study of this hybrid zone will provide a useful counterpart to the well‐studied hybrid zone between M .  m .  musculus and Mus musculus domesticus in central Europe.

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