MITOCHONDRIAL DNA DIVERSITY OF THE ALPINE NEWT (ICHTHYOSAURA ALPESTRIS) IN THE CARPATHIAN BASIN: EVIDENCE FOR MULTIPLE CRYPTIC LINEAGES ASSOCIATED WITH PLEISTOCENE REFUGIA*

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Abstract

The phylogeography and molecular taxonomy of the Alpine newt, Ichthyosaura alpestris, has been intensively studied in the past. However, previous studies did not include a comprehensive sampling from the Carpathian Basin, possibly a key region in the evolution of the species. We used a 1422 bp long fragment of the mitochondrial genome to infer the species' evolutionary history in central-eastern Europe by assigning isolated Carpathian Basin populations from 6 regions to previously defined mtDNA lineages. We also revised the morphology-based intraspecific taxonomy of the species in the light of new genetic data. Alpine newt populations from the Carpathian Basin represented two different mitochondrial lineages. The Matra, Bukk and Zemplen Mts populations can be assigned to the Western lineage of the nominotypical subspecies. Bakony and Orseg populations showed high haplotype diversity and formed a separate clade within the Western lineage, suggesting that the Carpathian Basin might have provided cryptic refugia for Alpine newt populations in their cold-continental forest-steppe landscapes during the younger Pleistocene. Newts from Apuseni Mts were related to the Eastern lineage but formed a distinct clade within this lineage. Considering the morphological and genetic differentiation of the Bakony and Orseg populations, consistent with a long independent evolutionary history, we propose these populations be referred to as Ichthyosaura alpestris bakonyiensis (Dely, 1964). We provide a redescription of this poorly known subspecies.

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Vörös, J., Varga, Z., Martínez-Solano, I., & Szabó, K. (2021). MITOCHONDRIAL DNA DIVERSITY OF THE ALPINE NEWT (ICHTHYOSAURA ALPESTRIS) IN THE CARPATHIAN BASIN: EVIDENCE FOR MULTIPLE CRYPTIC LINEAGES ASSOCIATED WITH PLEISTOCENE REFUGIA*. Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 67(2), 177–197. https://doi.org/10.17109/AZH.67.2.177.2021

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