Mammalian species origin and geographical dispersal patterns correlate with changes in chromosome structure, exemplified in lemurs (Madagascar) and bats (worldwide)

The origin and geographical distribution of mammalian species (my examples are lemurs and bats) correlate with predictable chromosomal structural changes (KFT=karyotypic fission theory). Chromosome studies provide information about fertility between individuals and they are significant for identific...

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Main Author: Kolnicki, Robin Lee
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3518251
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spelling ftunivmassamh:oai:scholarworks.umass.edu:dissertations-6599 2023-05-15T18:04:26+02:00 Mammalian species origin and geographical dispersal patterns correlate with changes in chromosome structure, exemplified in lemurs (Madagascar) and bats (worldwide) Kolnicki, Robin Lee 2012-01-01T08:00:00Z https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3518251 ENG eng ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3518251 Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest Geobiology text 2012 ftunivmassamh 2022-01-09T20:10:14Z The origin and geographical distribution of mammalian species (my examples are lemurs and bats) correlate with predictable chromosomal structural changes (KFT=karyotypic fission theory). Chromosome studies provide information about fertility between individuals and they are significant for identification of the geographical origin of reproductive isolation within mammal families. Each family predictably has chromosome sets with numbers that range from one to double the lowest number of chromosomes. The chromosome numbers of all species within a single family are used to reconstruct that family's evolutionary geographical dispersion. Polymorphic chromosome numbers (that is a range such as 34, 35, 36, 37, and 38) in a single population indicate the location where chromosomal diversification arose. Chromosome numbers of descending order correlate with relative distance from fission epicenters as the fissioned chromosomes gradually spread to neighboring populations. Furthermore, the location of chromosomal diversification (that is "karyotypic fission events) is associated with geographical "zones of transition" (after Professor R.W. Wilkie). My analysis, mapped one (Lepilemuridae) of the five families of lemurs (Class Mammalia, Order Primates, sub-order Lemuridae). The origin of this family's diversification is here hypothesized to have occurred at an ecological transition zone in Northern Madagascar between a humid evergreen-forest that extends to the East relative to a dry deciduous forest along the West Coast. My analysis of Vespertilionidae (insectivorous bats representing one third of all bat species) suggests a diversification event occurred in Asia; South China. Geographical distribution is important in the formation of biological diversity. A single species can inhabit a wide range and exhibit great diversity that is brought about by natural selection. The Holarctic reindeer found in Scandinavia, Russia, China, Canada and Alaska (including caribou) are all a single species Rangifer tarandus that exhibits variation in size and in coat pattern, changes brought about by adaptive selection by the environment or human selective breeding but they all have 70 similar chromosomes and they are all reproductively compatible. There is a single species of reindeer. Although, there is measurable DNA sequence divergence; there has been no "speciation" as these circumpolar cervids are genetically compatible. Text Rangifer tarandus Alaska University of Massachusetts: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Massachusetts: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
op_collection_id ftunivmassamh
language English
topic Geobiology
spellingShingle Geobiology
Kolnicki, Robin Lee
Mammalian species origin and geographical dispersal patterns correlate with changes in chromosome structure, exemplified in lemurs (Madagascar) and bats (worldwide)
topic_facet Geobiology
description The origin and geographical distribution of mammalian species (my examples are lemurs and bats) correlate with predictable chromosomal structural changes (KFT=karyotypic fission theory). Chromosome studies provide information about fertility between individuals and they are significant for identification of the geographical origin of reproductive isolation within mammal families. Each family predictably has chromosome sets with numbers that range from one to double the lowest number of chromosomes. The chromosome numbers of all species within a single family are used to reconstruct that family's evolutionary geographical dispersion. Polymorphic chromosome numbers (that is a range such as 34, 35, 36, 37, and 38) in a single population indicate the location where chromosomal diversification arose. Chromosome numbers of descending order correlate with relative distance from fission epicenters as the fissioned chromosomes gradually spread to neighboring populations. Furthermore, the location of chromosomal diversification (that is "karyotypic fission events) is associated with geographical "zones of transition" (after Professor R.W. Wilkie). My analysis, mapped one (Lepilemuridae) of the five families of lemurs (Class Mammalia, Order Primates, sub-order Lemuridae). The origin of this family's diversification is here hypothesized to have occurred at an ecological transition zone in Northern Madagascar between a humid evergreen-forest that extends to the East relative to a dry deciduous forest along the West Coast. My analysis of Vespertilionidae (insectivorous bats representing one third of all bat species) suggests a diversification event occurred in Asia; South China. Geographical distribution is important in the formation of biological diversity. A single species can inhabit a wide range and exhibit great diversity that is brought about by natural selection. The Holarctic reindeer found in Scandinavia, Russia, China, Canada and Alaska (including caribou) are all a single species Rangifer tarandus that exhibits variation in size and in coat pattern, changes brought about by adaptive selection by the environment or human selective breeding but they all have 70 similar chromosomes and they are all reproductively compatible. There is a single species of reindeer. Although, there is measurable DNA sequence divergence; there has been no "speciation" as these circumpolar cervids are genetically compatible.
format Text
author Kolnicki, Robin Lee
author_facet Kolnicki, Robin Lee
author_sort Kolnicki, Robin Lee
title Mammalian species origin and geographical dispersal patterns correlate with changes in chromosome structure, exemplified in lemurs (Madagascar) and bats (worldwide)
title_short Mammalian species origin and geographical dispersal patterns correlate with changes in chromosome structure, exemplified in lemurs (Madagascar) and bats (worldwide)
title_full Mammalian species origin and geographical dispersal patterns correlate with changes in chromosome structure, exemplified in lemurs (Madagascar) and bats (worldwide)
title_fullStr Mammalian species origin and geographical dispersal patterns correlate with changes in chromosome structure, exemplified in lemurs (Madagascar) and bats (worldwide)
title_full_unstemmed Mammalian species origin and geographical dispersal patterns correlate with changes in chromosome structure, exemplified in lemurs (Madagascar) and bats (worldwide)
title_sort mammalian species origin and geographical dispersal patterns correlate with changes in chromosome structure, exemplified in lemurs (madagascar) and bats (worldwide)
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2012
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3518251
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Rangifer tarandus
Alaska
genre_facet Rangifer tarandus
Alaska
op_source Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest
op_relation https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3518251
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