The genomic ancestry, landscape genetics and invasion history of introduced mice in New Zealand

Author:

Veale Andrew J.1ORCID,Russell James C.2,King Carolyn M.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental and Animal Sciences, Unitec, 139 Carrington Road, Auckland 1025, New Zealand

2. School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland Mail Centre, Auckland 1142, New Zealand

3. Environmental Research Institute, School of Science, University of Waikato, Private Bag 2105, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand

Abstract

The house mouse ( Mus musculus ) provides a fascinating system for studying both the genomic basis of reproductive isolation, and the patterns of human-mediated dispersal. New Zealand has a complex history of mouse invasions, and the living descendants of these invaders have genetic ancestry from all three subspecies, although most are primarily descended from M. m. domesticus . We used the GigaMUGA genotyping array (approximately 135 000 loci) to describe the genomic ancestry of 161 mice, sampled from 34 locations from across New Zealand (and one Australian city—Sydney). Of these, two populations, one in the south of the South Island, and one on Chatham Island, showed complete mitochondrial lineage capture, featuring two different lineages of M. m. castaneus mitochondrial DNA but with only M. m. domesticus nuclear ancestry detectable. Mice in the northern and southern parts of the North Island had small traces (approx. 2–3%) of M. m. castaneus nuclear ancestry, and mice in the upper South Island had approximately 7–8% M. m. musculus nuclear ancestry including some Y-chromosomal ancestry—though no detectable M. m. musculus mitochondrial ancestry. This is the most thorough genomic study of introduced populations of house mice yet conducted, and will have relevance to studies of the isolation mechanisms separating subspecies of mice.

Funder

Waikato University Strategic Investment Fund

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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