posted on 2015-12-31, 07:28authored byKhaled Merabet, Eugenia Sanchez, Abdelhak Dahmana, Sergé Bogaerts, David Donaire, Sebastian Steinfartz, Ulrich Joger, Miguel Vences, Mokrane Karar, Aissa Moali
The North African fire salamander, Salamandra algira, is
distributed in Algeria, Morocco and Ceuta (Spanish territory located on the
north coast of Africa), but until now rather limited information has been
available on the populations across the Algerian part of its range. We here
provide a first analysis of the phylogeography of this species in Algeria,
based on 44 samples from populations distributed across 15 localities in
Central Algeria. We sequenced three segments of mitochondrial DNA, covering 12S
rRNA, cytochrome b (Cytb) and the D-loop. The mtDNA sequences of the
Algerian samples were strongly different from the Moroccan populations
occurring west of the Moulouya River (corresponding to the subspecies S. a.
tingitana and S. a. splendens) but sister to the genetically rather
similar population from the Beni Snassen Massif in eastern Morocco (subspecies S.
algira spelaea). Among the Algerian specimens studied, those from the
westernmost site, Chrea Massif, were the sister clade to the remaining
populations, and the overall genetic divergence was low, with a maximum of five
mutational steps in a 295 bp fragment of cytochrome b.