Authors
Jeffrey M Good, Sarah Hird, Noah Reid, John R Demboski, Scott J Steppan, TINA R MARTIN‐NIMS, Jack Sullivan
Publication date
2008/3
Journal
Molecular ecology
Volume
17
Issue
5
Pages
1313-1327
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Models that posit speciation in the face of gene flow are replacing classical views that hybridization is rare between animal species. We use a multilocus approach to examine the history of hybridization and gene flow between two species of chipmunks (Tamias ruficaudus and T. amoenus). Previous studies have shown that these species occupy different ecological niches and have distinct genital bone morphologies, yet appear to be incompletely isolated reproductively in multiple areas of sympatry. We compared data from four sequenced nuclear loci and from seven microsatellite loci to published cytochrome b sequences. Interspecific gene flow was primarily restricted to introgression of the T. ruficaudus mitochondrial genome into a sympatric subspecies of T. amoenus, T. a. canicaudus, with the four sequenced nuclear loci showing little to no interspecific allele sharing. Microsatellite data were consistent with …
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