|
Omland, K. E., Marzluff, J., Boarman, W., Tarr, C. L., and Fleischer, R.
C. 2000. Cryptic genetic variation and paraphyly in ravens. Proceedings of
the Royal Society of London,
Biological Sciences. 267:2475-2482.
Widespread species that are morphologically uniform may be likely to
harbor cryptic genetic variation. Common Ravens (Corvus corax) have an
extensive range covering nearly the entire Northern Hemisphere, but show
little discrete phenotypic variation. We obtained tissue samples from
throughout much of this range and collected mitochondrial sequence and
nuclear microsatellite data. Our study revealed a deep genetic break between
ravens from the western United States
and ravens from throughout the rest of the world. These two groups, the
"California clade"
and the "Holarctic clade" are well supported and over 4% divergent
in mitochondrial coding sequence. Microsatellites also reveal significant
differentiation between these two groups. Ravens from Minnesota,
Maine and Alaska
are more similar to ravens from Asia and Europe
than they are to ravens from California.
The two clades come in contact over a huge area of the western United
States, with mixtures of the two
mitochondrial groups present in Washington, Idaho
and California. In addition,
the restricted range Chihuahuan Raven (Corvus cryptoleucus) of the southwest United
States and Mexico
is genetically nested within the paraphyletic Common Raven. Our findings
suggest that the Common Raven may have formerly consisted of two allopatric
groups that may be in the process of re-merging
|