2009
DOI: 10.1038/hdy.2009.137
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Molecular detection of hybridization between sympatric kangaroo species in south-eastern Australia

Abstract: Introgressive hybridization has traditionally been regarded as rare in many vertebrate groups, including mammals. Despite a propensity to hybridize in captivity, introgression has rarely been reported between wild sympatric macropodid marsupials. Here we investigate sympatric populations of western (Macropus fuliginosus) and eastern (Macropus giganteus) grey kangaroos through 12 autosomal microsatellite loci and 626 bp of the hypervariable mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region. M. fuliginosus and M. gigante… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…0.68 km 2 ; Caughley et al 1984;Neaves et al 2010) and the production of hybrids in captivity (Kirsch and Pool 1972), there was little evidence of natural hybridization between these macropod species (Coulson and Coulson 2001). In contrast to previous analyses, Neaves et al (2010) did indeed find evidence consistent with introgressive hybridization between M. fuliginosus and M. giganteus in the area of overlap in eastern Australia. Based upon variation at both nuclear and mitochondrial loci, 7.6 % of the >200 kangaroos sampled in the sympatric region were found to be hybrids.…”
Section: Marsupial Divergence-with-gene-flow: Interspecific Mating Incontrasting
confidence: 64%
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“…0.68 km 2 ; Caughley et al 1984;Neaves et al 2010) and the production of hybrids in captivity (Kirsch and Pool 1972), there was little evidence of natural hybridization between these macropod species (Coulson and Coulson 2001). In contrast to previous analyses, Neaves et al (2010) did indeed find evidence consistent with introgressive hybridization between M. fuliginosus and M. giganteus in the area of overlap in eastern Australia. Based upon variation at both nuclear and mitochondrial loci, 7.6 % of the >200 kangaroos sampled in the sympatric region were found to be hybrids.…”
Section: Marsupial Divergence-with-gene-flow: Interspecific Mating Incontrasting
confidence: 64%
“…Based upon variation at both nuclear and mitochondrial loci, 7.6 % of the >200 kangaroos sampled in the sympatric region were found to be hybrids. As is the case with the majority of cases of introgression among both plants and animals, there was an asymmetry in the genetic exchange, in this case with 14 of the 17 hybrid individuals identified as backcrosses toward M. giganteus and the remaining three hybrids assigned to the class of backcrosses to M. fuliginosus (Neaves et al 2010). None of the hybrid genotypes were consistent with an F 1 generation; thus, these findings reflect divergence-with-gene-flow between these marsupial species.…”
Section: Marsupial Divergence-with-gene-flow: Interspecific Mating Inmentioning
confidence: 87%
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“…This approach was applied by Burgarella et al (2009) in sympatric Q. ilex -Q. suber populations, estimating a current introgression rate of <2%. Later on, this procedure has been applied in studies for many other species, including animals (Neaves et al 2010, Bogdanowicz et al 2012, Malde et al 2017.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%