Abstract

Karyotypes of the Petchora and Kirillov chromosomal races of the common shrew differ by six Robertsonian metacentrics with monobrachial homology, such that interracial F1 hybrids produce a ring-of-six configuration at meiosis I and are expected to suffer infertility. Mapping of 52 karyotyped individuals by using a unique global positioning system (GPS) revealed that the Kirillov-Petchora hybrid zone is positioned close to the river Mezen, which separated these races, and so may limit the migration of shrews across the contact zone. Although the population density of shrews was found to be markedly different with respect to habitats, the zone runs through a mosaic of habitats that are similar for both the Petchora and the Kirillov sides. This is one of the narrowest chromosomal hybrid zones among those studied in Sorex araneus with a standard cline width of about 1 km. The center of the cline is located on a bank occupied by the Petchora race at a distance of 0.4 km away from a riverine barrier. Interestingly, both the Kirillov race and hybrid individuals were found on a small island in the middle of a river fully flooded each spring. The frequencies of karyotypic variants allow us to consider the zone as an example of a bimodal zone. New Robertsonian and de novo whole-arm reciprocal translocations (WART) chromosomal variants found in the zone could be regarded as evidences of current evolutionary process in chromosomal hybrid zones.

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