AI Article Synopsis

  • The text discusses how differences between mitochondrial and nuclear genetic patterns help understand the population dynamics of the fire salamander in peninsular Italy, underlining their importance for biodiversity monitoring using DNA barcoding.
  • Research identified two main population groups of the fire salamander, with surprising geographic boundaries between mitochondrial and nuclear markers being 600 km apart.
  • The findings reveal that past hybridization events and mitochondrial introgression influence genetic structure, highlighting the complexity of evolutionary processes in Salamandra salamandra populations.

Article Abstract

Discordance between mitochondrial and nuclear patterns of population genetic structure is providing key insights into the eco-evolutionary dynamics between and within species, and their assessment is highly relevant to biodiversity monitoring practices based on DNA barcoding approaches. Here, we investigate the population genetic structure of the fire salamander Salamandra salamandra in peninsular Italy. Both mitochondrial and nuclear markers clearly identified two main population groups. However, nuclear and mitochondrial zones of geographic transition between groups were located 600 km from one another. Recent population declines in central Italy partially erased the genetic imprints of past hybridization dynamics. However, the overall pattern of genetic variation, together with morphological and fossil data, suggest that a rampant mitochondrial introgression triggered the observed mitonuclear discordance, following a post-glacial secondary contact between lineages. Our results clearly show the major role played by reticulate evolution in shaping the structure of Salamandra salamandra populations and, together with similar findings in other regions of the species' range, contribute to identify the fire salamander as a particularly intriguing case to investigate the complexity of mechanisms triggering patterns of mitonuclear discordance in animals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6123427PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-31535-xDOI Listing

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