PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Oecomys catherinae (Sigmodontinae, Cricetidae): Evidence for chromosomal speciation?

  • Stella Miranda Malcher,
  • Julio Cesar Pieczarka,
  • Lena Geise,
  • Rogério Vieira Rossi,
  • Adenilson Leão Pereira,
  • Patricia Caroline Mary O'Brien,
  • Paulo Henrique Asfora,
  • Victor Fonsêca da Silva,
  • Maria Iracilda Sampaio,
  • Malcolm Andrew Ferguson-Smith,
  • Cleusa Yoshiko Nagamachi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181434
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. e0181434

Abstract

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Among the Oryzomyini (Sigmodontinae), Oecomys is the most speciose, with 17 species. This genus presents high karyotypic diversity (2n = 54 to 2n = 86) and many taxonomic issues at the species level because of the presence of cryptic species and the overlap of morphological characters. For these reasons the real number of species of Oecomys may be underestimated. With the aim of verifying if the taxon Oecomys catherinae is composed of more than one species, we made comparative studies on two populations from two regions of Brazil, one from the Amazon and another from the Atlantic Forest using both classical cytogenetics (G- and C-banding) and comparative genomic mapping with whole chromosome probes of Hylaeamys megacephalus (HME), molecular data (cytochrome b mitochondrial DNA) and morphology. Our results confirm that Oecomys catherinae occurs in the southeast Amazon, and reveal a new karyotype for the species (2n = 62, FNa = 62). The comparative genomic analysis with HME probes identified chromosomal homeologies between both populations and rearrangements that are responsible for the different karyotypes. We compared our results in Sigmodontinae genera with other studies that also used HME probes. These chromosomal differences together with the absence of consistent differentiation between the two populations on morphological and molecular analyses suggest that these populations may represent cryptic species.