The Celtic fringe of Britain: insights from small mammal phylogeography

Author:

Searle Jeremy B.1,Kotlík Petr2,Rambau Ramugondo V.13,Marková Silvia2,Herman Jeremy S.14,McDevitt Allan D.56

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of York, PO Box 373, York YO10 5YW, UK

2. Department of Vertebrate Evolutionary Biology and Genetics, Institute of Animal Physiology and Genetics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, CZ-27721 Liběchov, Czech Republic

3. DST-NRF Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology and Department of Botany and Zoology, Stellenbosch University, Private Bag X1, Matieland, 7602 Stellenbosch, South Africa

4. National Museums Scotland, Chambers Street, Edinburgh EH1 1JF, UK

5. School of Biology and Environmental Science, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland

6. Faculty of Environmental Design, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4, Canada

Abstract

Recent genetic studies have challenged the traditional view that the ancestors of British Celtic people spread from central Europe during the Iron Age and have suggested a much earlier origin for them as part of the human recolonization of Britain at the end of the last glaciation. Here we propose that small mammals provide an analogue to help resolve this controversy. Previous studies have shown that common shrews ( Sorex araneus ) with particular chromosomal characteristics and water voles ( Arvicola terrestris ) of a specific mitochondrial (mt) DNA lineage have peripheral western/northern distributions with striking similarities to that of Celtic people. We show that mtDNA lineages of three other small mammal species (bank vole Myodes glareolus , field vole Microtus agrestis and pygmy shrew Sorex minutus ) also form a ‘Celtic fringe’. We argue that these small mammals most reasonably colonized Britain in a two-phase process following the last glacial maximum (LGM), with climatically driven partial replacement of the first colonists by the second colonists, leaving a peripheral geographical distribution for the first colonists. We suggest that these natural Celtic fringes provide insight into the same phenomenon in humans and support its origin in processes following the end of the LGM.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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