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Toward a Molecular Phylogeny for Peromyscus: Evidence from Mitochondrial Cytochrome-b Sequences

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TLDR
Analysis of DNA sequences from the mitochondrial cytochrome-b gene of 44 species of deer mice used to develop a molecular phylogeny for Peromyscus depicted strong support for a clade placing Habromys, Megadontomys, Neotomodon, OsgoodomYS, and Podomys within Peromycus.
Abstract
One hundred DNA sequences from the mitochondrial cytochrome-b gene of 44 species of deer mice (Peromyscus (sensu stricto), 1 of Habromys, 1 of Isthmomys, 2 of Megadontomys, and the monotypic genera Neotomodon, Osgoodomys, and Podomys were used to develop a molecular phylogeny for Peromyscus. Phylogenetic analyses (maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian inference) were conducted to evaluate alternative hypotheses concerning taxonomic arrangements (sensu stricto versus sensu lato) of the genus. In all analyses, monophyletic clades were obtained that corresponded to species groups proposed by previous authors; however, relationships among species groups generally were poorly resolved. The concept of the genus Peromyscus based on molecular data differed significantly from the most current taxonomic arrangement. Maximum-likelihood and Bayesian trees depicted strong support for a clade placing Habromys, Megadontomys, Neotomodon, Osgoodomys, and Podomys within Peromyscus. If Habromys, Megadontomys, Neotomodon, Osgoodomys, and Podomys are regarded as genera, then several species groups within Peromyscus (sensu stricto) should be elevated to generic rank. Isthmomys was associated with the genus Reithrodontomys; in turn this clade was sister to Baiomys, indicating a distant relationship of Isthmomys to Peromyscus. A formal taxonomic revision awaits synthesis of additional sequence data from nuclear markers together with inclusion of available allozymic and karyotypic data.

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Muroid rodent phylogenetics: 900-species tree reveals increasing diversification rates

TL;DR: The results provide a phylogenetic framework for comparative studies that is not highly dependent upon the signal from any one gene and compared the results of multigene supermatrix studies like this one with the principal published supertrees and concluded that the latter are unreliable for any comparative study in muroids.
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Molecular Markers in Phylogenetic Studies-A Review

TL;DR: It appears that the use of molecular markers, though relatively recent in popularity and are not free entirely of flaws, can complement the traditional morphology based method for phylogenetic studies.
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Peromyscus mice as a model for studying natural variation

TL;DR: Over a century's worth of detailed descriptive studies of Peromyscus in the wild, coupled with emerging genetic and genomic techniques, have now positioned these mice as model organisms for the study of natural variation and adaptation.
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Regulatory changes contribute to the adaptive enhancement of thermogenic capacity in high-altitude deer mice

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that highland deer mice have an enhanced thermogenic capacity under hypoxia compared with lowland conspecifics and a closely related lowland species, Peromyscus leucopus, and Contrary to predictions derived from studies of humans at high altitude, the results suggest that selection to sustain prolonged thermogenesis under hypoxide promotes a shift in metabolic fuel use in favor of lipids over carbohydrates.
References
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