Mitochondrial restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) and sequence variation among closely related avian species and the genetic characterization of hybridDendroicawarblers
- 1 September 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Ecology
- Vol. 8 (9) , 1431-1441
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-294x.1999.00706.x
Abstract
To address several interconnected goals, we used mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences to explore evolutionary relationships among four potentially hybridizing taxa in a North American avian superspecies (Dendroica occidentalis, D. townsendi, D. virens, and D. nigrescens). We first compared the results of a previous restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP)‐based study with 1453 nucleotides from the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI), ATP‐synthase 6 (ATPase 6), and ATP‐synthase 8 (ATPase 8) genes. Separate phylogenetic analyses of the RFLP and sequence data provided identical and well‐supported hierarchical species‐level reconstructions that grouped occidentalis and townsendi as sister taxa. We then explored several general features of mitochondrial evolution via a comparison of the RFLP and sequence data sets. Qualitative rate differences that seemed evident in highly autocorrelated comparisons of RFLP vs. sequence pairwise distances were not supported when autocorrelation was removed. We also noted a high variance in corresponding RFLP and sequence distances after the removal of autocorrelation effects. This variance suggests that caution should be used when combining RFLP and sequence‐based data in studies that require the large‐scale synthesis of divergence estimates drawn from sources employing different molecular techniques. Finally, we used our parallel RFLP and sequence data to design and validate a rapid and inexpensive polymerase chain reaction‐RFLP (PCR‐RFLP) protocol for determining species‐specific mitochondrial haplotypes. This PCR‐RFLP technique will be applied in ongoing studies of the occidentalis/townsendi hybrid zone, where the historic and geographical complexity of the interbreeding populations necessitates the genotyping of thousands of individual warblers.Keywords
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