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Genetic distinction between contiguous urban and rural multimammate mice in Tanzania despite gene flow

Authors :
J. Goüy de Bellocq
Jan Broeckhove
Stuart J. E. Baird
Kurt Vanmechelen
Herwig Leirs
Rhodes H. Makundi
Jan Zima
Radim Šumbera
Sophie Gryseels
Vladimír Mazoch
Source :
Journal of evolutionary biology
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wiley, 2016.

Abstract

Special conditions are required for genetic differentiation to arise at a local geographical scale in the face of gene flow. The Natal multimammate mouse, Mastomys natalensis, is the most widely distributed and abundant rodent in sub-Saharan Africa. A notorious agricultural pest and a natural host for many zoonotic diseases, it can live in close proximity to humans and appears to compete with other rodents for the synanthropic niche. We surveyed its population genetic structure across a 180-km transect in central Tanzania along which the landscape varied between agricultural land in a rural setting and natural woody vegetation, rivers, roads and a city (Morogoro). We sampled M. natalensis across 10 localities and genotyped 15 microsatellite loci from 515 individuals. Hierarchical STRUCTURE analyses show a K-invariant pattern distinguishing Morogoro suburbs (located in the centre of the transect) from nine surrounding rural localities. Landscape connectivity analyses in Circuitscape and comparison of rainfall patterns suggest that neither geographical isolation nor natural breeding asynchrony could explain the genetic differentiation of the urban population. Using the isolation-with-migration model implemented in IMa2, we inferred that a split between suburban and rural populations would have occurred recently (

Details

ISSN :
14209101 and 1010061X
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....be51cdf8f8629df295c6671c427e7178