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Research Article

Systematics, biogeography and phylogenomics of northern bog lemmings (Cricetidae), cold-temperate rodents of conservation concern under global change

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Abstract

Northern bog lemmings, Mictomys (Synaptomys) borealis, are currently being assessed for protections under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. A major impediment to comprehensive evaluation is a deficiency of data towards understanding the biology of these rodents. Inherent rarity and scarce specimen sampling, despite a continent-wide distribution, has precluded our ability to implement modern methods for resolving taxonomy, evolutionary history, and investigating multiple other species traits. Here we use a maternally inherited locus (mitochondrial cytochrome b) and between 5939 and 11 513 nuclear loci from reduced representation sequencing (ddRADseq) to investigate the evolutionary history of northern bog lemmings. We (1) qualify evidence based on morphological and early molecular studies for the genus assignment of Mictomys, (2) test the validity of multiple sub-species designations, (3) provide spatial and temporal historical biogeographic perspectives, and (4) discuss how incomplete sampling might influence conservation efforts. Both mitochondrial and nuclear datasets exhibit deep divergence and paraphyly between two recognized species, the northern (Mictomys borealis) and southern (Synaptomys cooperi) bog lemmings. Based on mtDNA, the geographically isolated subspecies (M. b. sphagnicola) was found to be divergent from all other specimens. The remainder of the species exhibited shallow intra-specific differentiation in mtDNA, however, nuclear data supports genetic distinction consistent with four geographic subspecies. Recent coalescence of all northern bog lemmings (except for M. b. sphagnicola) reflects divergence in multiple refugia through the last glacial cycle, including a well-known coastal center of endemism and multiple regions south of continental ice sheets. Regional lineages across North America suggest strong latitudinal displacement with global climate change, coupled with isolation-reconnection dynamics. This taxon suffers from a lack of modern samples through most of its distribution, severely limiting the interpretation of ongoing evolutionary processes, particularly in southern portions of the species’ range. Limited voucher specimen sampling of vulnerable populations could aid in rigorous conservation decision-making.

Acknowledgements

We thank T. J. Hafliger, T. M. Herrera, L. P. T. Wooten, J. Grimes, and F. J. Combe for assistance with genetic lab work and field sampling. Thanks also to the Kansas State University Developing Scholars Program for financial and intellectual support (KH). In addition, we thank the Beringian Coevolution Project (NSF 0415668, 9972154) for accumulating the majority of specimen resources that made this work possible, especially J.A. Cook and S. O. Macdonald, and many associated field crews. These field efforts were also supported in part by the U.S. National Park Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Alaska Department of Game and Fish. Thanks to the University of Alaska Museum of the North (K. Hildebrandt, L. Olson), the Museum of Southwestern Biology (M. Campbell, J. L. Dunnum, J. A. Cook), the National Museum of Natural History, and the National Biodiversity Cryobank of Canada (D. Fauteux, R. Bull) for tissue sample loans. Finally, thanks to the northern bog lemming working group for ecological insight to ongoing conservation efforts for this species and helpful comments towards manuscript preparation, especially K. Ott, A. Droghini, J. Hagelin, A. Baltensperger, M. Glon.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Supplemental material

Supplemental material for this article can be accessed here: https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14772000.2023.2237050.

Data availability statement

Mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences can be found in GenBank (Accession numbers: OR350870-OR350919). ddRADseq raw sequence reads are deposited in the SRA (BioProject: PRJNA996183). All specimen data are provided online in Supplemental Material Appendix A.

Associate Editor: Dr Susan Tsang

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service through a small service contract. Bioinformatic analyses were performed on the Beocat Research Cluster at Kansas State University, which is funded in part by NSF grants [CNS-1006860, EPS-1006860, EPS-0919443, ACI-1440548, CHE-1726332, and NIH P20GM113109].

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