Phylogenomic Analysis of Wide‐Ranging Least Shrews Refines Conservation Priorities and Supports a Paradigm for Evolution of Biota Spanning Eastern North America and Mesoamerica

ABSTRACT Anthropogenic global change is impacting the evolutionary potential of biodiversity in ways that have been difficult to predict. Distinct evolutionary units within species may respond differently to the same environmental trends, reflecting unique geography, ecology, adaptation, or drift. L...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tommy M. Galfano, Tommy M. Herrera, John B. Bulger, James N. Stuart, Jennifer K. Frey, Andrew G. Hope
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-05-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71263
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850124339598327808
author Tommy M. Galfano
Tommy M. Herrera
John B. Bulger
James N. Stuart
Jennifer K. Frey
Andrew G. Hope
author_facet Tommy M. Galfano
Tommy M. Herrera
John B. Bulger
James N. Stuart
Jennifer K. Frey
Andrew G. Hope
author_sort Tommy M. Galfano
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Anthropogenic global change is impacting the evolutionary potential of biodiversity in ways that have been difficult to predict. Distinct evolutionary units within species may respond differently to the same environmental trends, reflecting unique geography, ecology, adaptation, or drift. Least shrews (Cryptotis parvus group) have a widespread distribution across North America, yet systematic relationships and ongoing evolutionary processes remain unresolved. Westernmost peripheral populations have been prioritized for conservation, but little is known of their evolutionary histories or population trajectories. The broad range of this group of species is coincident with many other temperate taxa, presenting a hypothesis that diversification of least shrews follows a repeated process through the Pleistocene, leading to regionally diagnosable conservation units. We use genomic data and niche modeling to delimit species and conservation units of least shrews. Our results show that least shrews warrant recognition as multiple distinct species, along with geographically discrete infraspecific lineages of C. parvus (sensu stricto). Western peripheral populations are evolutionarily distinct based on nuclear, but not mitochondrial data, possibly reflecting mitochondrial capture during the last glacial phase. This population represents a relict conservation unit, consistent with both an “adaptive unit” and “management unit” based on non‐neutral and neutral divergence, respectively. Hindcast niche modeling supports growing evidence for a shared process of diversification among co‐distributed biota, and forecast modeling suggests continued future loss of suitable environmental niche in peripheral regions. Given mito‐nuclear discordance among samples of parapatric lineages, future environmental perturbation may continue to impact the genomic integrity of important conservation units, making ecological and genomic monitoring a critical need.
format Article
id doaj-art-3a7284e2f7b04575b0d2c5831f30adcc
institution OA Journals
issn 2045-7758
language English
publishDate 2025-05-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Ecology and Evolution
spelling doaj-art-3a7284e2f7b04575b0d2c5831f30adcc2025-08-20T02:34:20ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582025-05-01155n/an/a10.1002/ece3.71263Phylogenomic Analysis of Wide‐Ranging Least Shrews Refines Conservation Priorities and Supports a Paradigm for Evolution of Biota Spanning Eastern North America and MesoamericaTommy M. Galfano0Tommy M. Herrera1John B. Bulger2James N. Stuart3Jennifer K. Frey4Andrew G. Hope5Division of Biology Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USADivision of Biology Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USANew Mexico Department of Game and Fish Santa Fe New Mexico USANew Mexico Department of Game and Fish Santa Fe New Mexico USADepartment of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Ecology New Mexico State University Las Cruces New Mexico USADivision of Biology Kansas State University Manhattan Kansas USAABSTRACT Anthropogenic global change is impacting the evolutionary potential of biodiversity in ways that have been difficult to predict. Distinct evolutionary units within species may respond differently to the same environmental trends, reflecting unique geography, ecology, adaptation, or drift. Least shrews (Cryptotis parvus group) have a widespread distribution across North America, yet systematic relationships and ongoing evolutionary processes remain unresolved. Westernmost peripheral populations have been prioritized for conservation, but little is known of their evolutionary histories or population trajectories. The broad range of this group of species is coincident with many other temperate taxa, presenting a hypothesis that diversification of least shrews follows a repeated process through the Pleistocene, leading to regionally diagnosable conservation units. We use genomic data and niche modeling to delimit species and conservation units of least shrews. Our results show that least shrews warrant recognition as multiple distinct species, along with geographically discrete infraspecific lineages of C. parvus (sensu stricto). Western peripheral populations are evolutionarily distinct based on nuclear, but not mitochondrial data, possibly reflecting mitochondrial capture during the last glacial phase. This population represents a relict conservation unit, consistent with both an “adaptive unit” and “management unit” based on non‐neutral and neutral divergence, respectively. Hindcast niche modeling supports growing evidence for a shared process of diversification among co‐distributed biota, and forecast modeling suggests continued future loss of suitable environmental niche in peripheral regions. Given mito‐nuclear discordance among samples of parapatric lineages, future environmental perturbation may continue to impact the genomic integrity of important conservation units, making ecological and genomic monitoring a critical need.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71263conservation unitsCryptotis parvusddRADseqmito‐nuclear discordanceperipheral endemismpopulation genomics
spellingShingle Tommy M. Galfano
Tommy M. Herrera
John B. Bulger
James N. Stuart
Jennifer K. Frey
Andrew G. Hope
Phylogenomic Analysis of Wide‐Ranging Least Shrews Refines Conservation Priorities and Supports a Paradigm for Evolution of Biota Spanning Eastern North America and Mesoamerica
Ecology and Evolution
conservation units
Cryptotis parvus
ddRADseq
mito‐nuclear discordance
peripheral endemism
population genomics
title Phylogenomic Analysis of Wide‐Ranging Least Shrews Refines Conservation Priorities and Supports a Paradigm for Evolution of Biota Spanning Eastern North America and Mesoamerica
title_full Phylogenomic Analysis of Wide‐Ranging Least Shrews Refines Conservation Priorities and Supports a Paradigm for Evolution of Biota Spanning Eastern North America and Mesoamerica
title_fullStr Phylogenomic Analysis of Wide‐Ranging Least Shrews Refines Conservation Priorities and Supports a Paradigm for Evolution of Biota Spanning Eastern North America and Mesoamerica
title_full_unstemmed Phylogenomic Analysis of Wide‐Ranging Least Shrews Refines Conservation Priorities and Supports a Paradigm for Evolution of Biota Spanning Eastern North America and Mesoamerica
title_short Phylogenomic Analysis of Wide‐Ranging Least Shrews Refines Conservation Priorities and Supports a Paradigm for Evolution of Biota Spanning Eastern North America and Mesoamerica
title_sort phylogenomic analysis of wide ranging least shrews refines conservation priorities and supports a paradigm for evolution of biota spanning eastern north america and mesoamerica
topic conservation units
Cryptotis parvus
ddRADseq
mito‐nuclear discordance
peripheral endemism
population genomics
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71263
work_keys_str_mv AT tommymgalfano phylogenomicanalysisofwiderangingleastshrewsrefinesconservationprioritiesandsupportsaparadigmforevolutionofbiotaspanningeasternnorthamericaandmesoamerica
AT tommymherrera phylogenomicanalysisofwiderangingleastshrewsrefinesconservationprioritiesandsupportsaparadigmforevolutionofbiotaspanningeasternnorthamericaandmesoamerica
AT johnbbulger phylogenomicanalysisofwiderangingleastshrewsrefinesconservationprioritiesandsupportsaparadigmforevolutionofbiotaspanningeasternnorthamericaandmesoamerica
AT jamesnstuart phylogenomicanalysisofwiderangingleastshrewsrefinesconservationprioritiesandsupportsaparadigmforevolutionofbiotaspanningeasternnorthamericaandmesoamerica
AT jenniferkfrey phylogenomicanalysisofwiderangingleastshrewsrefinesconservationprioritiesandsupportsaparadigmforevolutionofbiotaspanningeasternnorthamericaandmesoamerica
AT andrewghope phylogenomicanalysisofwiderangingleastshrewsrefinesconservationprioritiesandsupportsaparadigmforevolutionofbiotaspanningeasternnorthamericaandmesoamerica