The mutual history of Schlegel’s Japanese gecko (Reptilia: Squamata: Gekkonidae) and humans inscribed in genes and ancient literature

Author:

Chiba Minoru1ORCID,Hirano Takahiro12,Yamazaki Daishi23ORCID,Ye Bin14,Ito Shun12ORCID,Kagawa Osamu15ORCID,Endo Komei1,Nishida Shu1ORCID,Hara Seiji1,Aratake Kenichiro2ORCID,Chiba Satoshi12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University , Miyagi, Japan

2. Center for Northeast Asian Studies, Tohoku University , Miyagi, Japan

3. Faculty of Agriculture and Marine Science, Kochi University , Kochi, Japan

4. Institute of Biomedical and Health Engineering, Shenzhen Institute of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Shenzhen, China

5. Shimoda Marine Research Center, University of Tsukuba , Shizuoka, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Knowing how the present distribution of organisms was formed is an essential issue in evolutionary ecology. Recently, the distribution of organisms on Earth has been significantly changed by human-mediated dispersal due to globalization. Therefore, significant attention has been paid to such processes. However, although humankind has taken considerable time to achieve modernization, the impact of ancient human activity on ecosystems has not yet been thoroughly studied. We hypothesized that ancient urban development and transitions had a non-negligible effect on species distribution. Inferring the impact of past human activity on ecosystems from ancient literature and verifying that impact by genetic analysis and human history is an effective means of tackling this problem. As geckos, a popular neighbor of human dwellings, are good material for this model, we performed this combination approach using Schlegel’s Japanese gecko, Gekko japonicus. We show that G. japonicus migrated from China to the western Japanese archipelago before Christ. The gecko species dispersed itself from western to eastern the archipelago on a time scale of thousands of years. There are many synchronizations between the dispersal history of G. japonicus and the historical development of human society. It is suggested by such synchronizations that humans have influenced the distribution of G. japonicus many times throughout its dispersal history.

Funder

CNEAS

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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