Abstract

The South American plains vizcacha, Lagostomus maximus inhabits primarily the Pampean and adjoining Espinal, Monte and Chaquenean regions of Argentina. In order to study the population genetic structure of L. maximus, a fragment of 560 bp of the mitochondrial DNA hypervariable region 1from 90 individuals collected from the 3 subspecies and 8 groups along Argentina was amplified and analyzed. We found 9 haplotypes. The haplotype network did not show an apparent phylogeographical signal. Although low levels of genetic variation were found in all the subspecies and groups analyzed, a radiation of L. maximus would have occurred from the North and Center of the Pampean region toward the rest of its geographic range in Argentina. Low levels of genetic diversity, the existence of a single genetically distinct population in Argentina and changes of its effective size indicate that metapopulation processes and changes in human population dynamics during the late-Holocene were important factors shaping the population genetic structure of L. maximus in Argentina.

Highlights

  • Studying the amount and the pattern of genetic diversity found within and between populations is one of the central aims of population genetics

  • The highest genetic variability was observed in L. m. maximus, while at group level it was observed in group C (Table 1)

  • In this study we analyzed for the first time the population genetic structure of L. maximus along most of its geographic range employing mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)

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Summary

Introduction

Studying the amount and the pattern of genetic diversity found within and between populations is one of the central aims of population genetics. Elucidating the population genetic structure of a species provides ecological and evolutionary information that allows the identification of conservation units. The population genetic structure of many species is currently poorly understood. The South American plains vizcacha, Lagostomus maximus, is a hystricognath rodent belonging to the family Chinchillidae. The family comprises the chinchillas (Chinchilla spp.) and mountain vizcachas (Lagidium spp.). L. maximus inhabits primarily the Pampean and adjoining Espinal, Monte and Chaquenean regions of Argentina, though it is found in southeastern Bolivia and western Paraguay [1,2]

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