How to translate text using browser tools
31 August 2019 A Genetic Study of a Newly Found Population of Siberian Salamander, Salamandrella keyserlingii (Amphibia, Caudata)
Masafumi Matsui, Natsuhiko Yoshikawa, Tomoko Tanaka-Ueno, Takanori Sato, Sen Takenaka, Shigeharu Terui, Yasuyuki Oppata, Atsushi Tominaga
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

We sequenced mitochondrial cytochrome b gene of 14 samples of Siberian salamander, Salamandrella keyserlingii, from a population newly found in Kamishihoro-cho, eastern Hokkaido, Japan, and conducted phylogenetic analysis to reveal genetic identity of the population. The Kamishihoro population was most closely related to the geographically adjacent Kushiro population from Hokkaido, but possessed a single, unique haplotype. This result indicates that the Kamishihoro population is not an introduced, but a native population. Salamandrella keyserlingii is thought to have been once widespread throughout Sakhalin to Hokkaido, but the range was greatly narrowed subsequently in Hokkaido, with the divergence of the Kamishihoro and Kushiro populations at 0.34 MYBP, Middle Pleistocene.

© 2019 by The Herpetological Society of Japan
Masafumi Matsui, Natsuhiko Yoshikawa, Tomoko Tanaka-Ueno, Takanori Sato, Sen Takenaka, Shigeharu Terui, Yasuyuki Oppata, and Atsushi Tominaga "A Genetic Study of a Newly Found Population of Siberian Salamander, Salamandrella keyserlingii (Amphibia, Caudata)," Current Herpetology 38(2), 122-127, (31 August 2019). https://doi.org/10.5358/hsj.38.122
Accepted: 23 June 2019; Published: 31 August 2019
KEYWORDS
genetic diversity
genetic identity
mitochondrial DNA
Salamandrella keyserlingii
Siberian salamander
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top