Abstract

The stone marten is a widely distributed mustelid in the Palaearctic region that exhibits variable habitat preferences in different parts of its range. The species is a Holocene immigrant from southwest Asia which, according to fossil remains, followed the expansion of the Neolithic farming cultures into Europe and possibly colonized the Iberian Peninsula during the Early Neolithic (ca. 7,000 years BP). However, the population genetic structure and historical biogeography of this generalist carnivore remains essentially unknown. In this study we have combined mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequencing (621 bp) and microsatellite genotyping (23 polymorphic markers) to infer the population genetic structure of the stone marten within the Iberian Peninsula. The mtDNA data revealed low haplotype and nucleotide diversities and a lack of phylogeographic structure, most likely due to a recent colonization of the Iberian Peninsula by a few mtDNA lineages during the Early Neolithic. The microsatellite data set was analysed with a) spatial and non-spatial Bayesian individual-based clustering (IBC) approaches (STRUCTURE, TESS, BAPS and GENELAND), and b) multivariate methods [discriminant analysis of principal components (DAPC) and spatial principal component analysis (sPCA)]. Additionally, because isolation by distance (IBD) is a common spatial genetic pattern in mobile and continuously distributed species and it may represent a challenge to the performance of the above methods, the microsatellite data set was tested for its presence. Overall, the genetic structure of the stone marten in the Iberian Peninsula was characterized by a NE-SW spatial pattern of IBD, and this may explain the observed disagreement between clustering solutions obtained by the different IBC methods. However, there was significant indication for contemporary genetic structuring, albeit weak, into at least three different subpopulations. The detected subdivision could be attributed to the influence of the rivers Ebro, Tagus and Guadiana, suggesting that main watercourses in the Iberian Peninsula may act as semi-permeable barriers to gene flow in stone martens. To our knowledge, this is the first phylogeographic and population genetic study of the species at a broad regional scale. We also wanted to make the case for the importance and benefits of using and comparing multiple different clustering and multivariate methods in spatial genetic analyses of mobile and continuously distributed species.

Highlights

  • In continuous populations, genetic structure vary from a single identifiable group of individuals, with gene flow only restricted by the distance among them, to an unknown number of subpopulations separated by barriers to gene exchange [1,2]

  • The phylogeography of the stone marten in the Iberian Peninsula is compatible with a single recent colonization of the region, possibly in the early Holocene, followed by population expansion sometime later

  • Its contemporary genetic structure is characterized by a significant pattern of IBD and an apparent differentiation of the populations at the extreme of an NE-SW axis

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Summary

Introduction

Genetic structure vary from a single identifiable group of individuals, with gene flow only restricted by the distance among them, to an unknown number of subpopulations separated by barriers to gene exchange [1,2]. Recent studies conducted on broadly distributed species have revealed cryptic patterns of genetic structuring in apparently continuous populations due to historical processes and/or the presence of major topographic and landscape features [4,5,6]. [13] suggested comparing the outputs of several IBC algorithms, in addition to testing for the presence of IBD, to infer a genetic structuring that could be empirically explained. A consensual solution from the combination of different approaches (i.e. Bayesian and multivariate analyses) can be used to obtain reliable inferences on spatial genetic patterns [10,15,17], which may be cryptic and/or complex in mobile and continuously distributed taxa [3]

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