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      Phylogeography of a widespread small carnivore, the western spotted skunk ( Spilogale gracilis) reveals temporally variable signatures of isolation across western North America

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          Abstract

          We analyzed phylogeographic patterns in the western spotted skunk, Spilogale gracilis Merriam, 1890 (Carnivora: Mephitidae) in relation to historical events associated with Pre‐Pleistocene Divergence (PPD) and Quaternary climate change (QCC) using mitochondrial DNA from 97 individuals distributed across Western North America. Divergence times were generated using BEAST to estimate when isolation in putative refugia occurred. Patterns and timing of demographic expansion was performed using Bayesian skyline plot. Putative climatic refugia resulting from Quaternary climate change were identified using paleoecological niche modeling and divergence dates compared to major vicariant events associated with Pre‐Pleistocene conditions. We recovered three major mitochondrial clades corresponding to western North America (California, Baja, and across the Great Basin), east‐central North America (Texas, central Mexico, New Mexico), and southwestern Arizona/northwestern Mexico. Time to most recent common ancestor for S. gracilis occurred ~1.36 Ma. Divergence times for each major clade occurred between 0.25 and 0.12 Ma, with signature of population expansion occurring 0.15 and 0.10 Ma. Ecological niche models identified three potential climatic refugia during the Last Interglacial, (1) west coast of California and Oregon, (2) northwestern Mexico, and (3) southern Texas/northeastern Mexico as well as two refugia during the Last Glacial Maximum, (1) western USA and (2) southern Texas/northeastern Mexico. This study supports PPD in shaping species‐level diversity compared to QCC‐driven changes at the intraspecific level for Spilogale, similar to the patterns reported for other small mammals (e.g., rodents and bats). Phylogeographic patterns also appear to have been shaped by both habitat and river vicariance, especially across the desert southwest. Further, continuing climate change during the Holocene coupled with anthropogenic modifications during the Anthropocene appears to be removing both of these barriers to current dispersal of western spotted skunks.

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          BIONJ: an improved version of the NJ algorithm based on a simple model of sequence data.

          O. Gascuel (1997)
          We propose an improved version of the neighbor-joining (NJ) algorithm of Saitou and Nei. This new algorithm, BIONJ, follows the same agglomerative scheme as NJ, which consists of iteratively picking a pair of taxa, creating a new mode which represents the cluster of these taxa, and reducing the distance matrix by replacing both taxa by this node. Moreover, BIONJ uses a simple first-order model of the variances and covariances of evolutionary distance estimates. This model is well adapted when these estimates are obtained from aligned sequences. At each step it permits the selection, from the class of admissible reductions, of the reduction which minimizes the variance of the new distance matrix. In this way, we obtain better estimates to choose the pair of taxa to be agglomerated during the next steps. Moreover, in comparison with NJ's estimates, these estimates become better and better as the algorithm proceeds. BIONJ retains the good properties of NJ--especially its low run time. Computer simulations have been performed with 12-taxon model trees to determine BIONJ's efficiency. When the substitution rates are low (maximum pairwise divergence approximately 0.1 substitutions per site) or when they are constant among lineages, BIONJ is only slightly better than NJ. When the substitution rates are higher and vary among lineages,BIONJ clearly has better topological accuracy. In the latter case, for the model trees and the conditions of evolution tested, the topological error reduction is on the average around 20%. With highly-varying-rate trees and with high substitution rates (maximum pairwise divergence approximately 1.0 substitutions per site), the error reduction may even rise above 50%, while the probability of finding the correct tree may be augmented by as much as 15%.
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            The conditioned reconstructed process.

            We investigate a neutral model for speciation and extinction, the constant rate birth-death process. The process is conditioned to have n extant species today, we look at the tree distribution of the reconstructed trees--i.e. the trees without the extinct species. Whereas the tree shape distribution is well-known and actually the same as under the pure birth process, no analytic results for the speciation times were known. We provide the distribution for the speciation times and calculate the expectations analytically. This characterizes the reconstructed trees completely. We will show how the results can be used to date phylogenies.
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              The Rise of the Mesopredator

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                adamwferguson@gmail.com
                Journal
                Ecol Evol
                Ecol Evol
                10.1002/(ISSN)2045-7758
                ECE3
                Ecology and Evolution
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                2045-7758
                03 May 2017
                June 2017
                : 7
                : 12 ( doiID: 10.1002/ece3.2017.7.issue-12 )
                : 4229-4240
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of BiologyTexas Tech University Lubbock TXUSA
                [ 2 ] Division of Mammals National Museum of Natural HistorySmithsonian Institution Washington DCUSA
                [ 3 ] Center for Conservation Genomics Smithsonian Conservation Biology InstituteNational Zoological Park Washington DCUSA
                [ 4 ] Department of BiologyAngelo State University San Angelo TXUSA
                [ 5 ] United States Fish and Wildlife ServiceTwin Cities Ecological Services Office Bloomington MNUSA
                [ 6 ] Museum of Southwestern BiologyUniversity of New Mexico Albuquerque NMUSA
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Correspondence

                Adam W. Ferguson, Division of Mammals, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL, USA.

                Email: adamwferguson@ 123456gmail.com

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-6931-6420
                Article
                ECE32931
                10.1002/ece3.2931
                5478080
                63908057-06dd-4b14-a0f6-f8d7283d24df
                © 2017 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 22 August 2016
                : 26 December 2016
                : 21 February 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 3, Tables: 2, Pages: 12, Words: 9797
                Categories
                Original Research
                Original Research
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                ece32931
                June 2017
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:5.1.1 mode:remove_FC converted:20.06.2017

                Evolutionary Biology
                carnivora,desert southwest,ecological niche modeling,mephitidae,mitochondrial dna,pre‐pleistocene divergence,quaternary climate change,refugia

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