Kaori Hanazaki's research while affiliated with Hokkaido University and other places

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Publications (2)


Quaternary Environmental Changes Shaped Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in the Large Japanese Wood Mouse Apodemus speciosus in Hokkaido, Japan
  • Article
  • Full-text available

September 2022

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49 Reads

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3 Citations

Mammal Study

Yuta Inoue

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Yutaro Suzuki

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Kaori Hanazaki

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Quaternary environmental change provided opportunities for rapid population expansion; however, the process of building the population spatial structures remains poorly understood. In this study, we determined the mitochondrial cytochrome b and control region sequences of 43 individuals of the large Japanese wood mouse (Apodemus speciosus) from Hokkaido, northern Japan and analyzed these data along with those from 40 other individuals. Consistent with the findings of our previous study, we found that two rapid expansion events, after the last glacial maximum (LGM) and Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 4, shaped population genetic pattern of A. speciosus in Hokkaido. In northeastern Hokkaido, several ancient lineages that originated during MIS 3 were detected, whereas central Hokkaido was dominated by haplotypes descended from a single lineage that survived the LGM, suggesting that the populations of western part of Hokkaido were newly formed by westward migration from eastern Hokkaido during the post-LGM warm period. Alternatively, as post-LGM vegetation recovery is thought to have occurred gradually from west to east in Hokkaido, population expansion started in the west and moved gradually to the east, resulting in eastward haplotype movement; thus, western and eastern Hokkaido may have served as the haplotype source and sink, respectively.

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Estimation of Evolutionary Rates of Mitochondrial DNA in Two Japanese Wood Mouse Species Based on Calibrations with Quaternary Environmental Changes

July 2017

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89 Reads

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22 Citations

ZOOLOGICAL SCIENCE

Kaori Hanazaki

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Yutaro Suzuki

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Reliable estimates of evolutionary rates of mitochondrial DNA might allow us to build realistic evo- lutionary scenarios covering broad time scales based on phylogenetic inferences. In the present study, we sought to obtain estimates of evolutionary rates in murine rodents using calibrations against historical biogeographic events. We first assumed that land-bridge-like structures that appeared intermittently at glacial maxima with 100,000-year intervals shaped the divergence pat- terns of cytochrome b (Cytb) sequences (1140 bp) of the larger Japanese wood mouse Apodemus speciosus. The comparison of sequences from peripheral remote islands that are separated from one another by deep straits allowed us to estimate mitochondrial DNA evolutionary rates (substitu- tions/site/million years) to be 0.027 to 0.036, with presumed calibrations from 140,000, 250,000, 350,000, and 440,000 years ago. Second, we addressed rapid expansion events inferred from anal- yses of the Cytb sequences of the lesser Japanese wood mouse A. argenteus. We detected five expansion signals in the dataset and established three categories based on the expansion param- eter tau values: 3.9, 5.6–5.7, and 7.8–8.1. Considering that the climate became warmer 15,000, 53,000, and 115,000 years ago after preceding periods of rapid cooling, we calculated evolutionary rates to be 0.114, 0.047, and 0.031, respectively. This preliminary concept of the evolutionary rates on a time scale from 15,000 to 440,000 years ago for the wood mouse should be refined and tested in other species of murine rodents, including mice and rats.

Citations (2)


... This may be a result of past forest fragmentation within the island during glacial periods (Igarashi, 2016), which would have forced the sable to retreat into micro-refugia and promoted genetic diversification within the island. Similar patterns have been suggested for other terrestrial mammals in Hokkaido (Inoue et al., 2022;Kawai et al., 2013;Kinoshita et al., 2012;Noda et al., 2016;Suzuki et al., 2015). Alternatively, the outcome could be a result of severe hunting pressure prior to prohibition in 1920 (Hirakawa et al., 2015). ...

Reference:

Ice age land bridges to continental islands: Repeated migration of the forest-dwelling sable in northeastern Asia
Quaternary Environmental Changes Shaped Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in the Large Japanese Wood Mouse Apodemus speciosus in Hokkaido, Japan

Mammal Study

... These include glacial cycles occurring in approximately 100,000year cycles, as well as other environmental changes, particularly during the last 150,000 years, which have influenced the genetic diversity of numerous present-day organisms. In previous studies of high-and mid-latitude species on mtDNA, the signals of rapid expansion events coinciding with the penultimate glacial maximum (PGM) 140,000 years ago (ya) and the last glacial maximum (LGM) 20,000 ya have been detected in small mammals, i.e., flying squirrels (Oshida et al., 2009), field mice (genus Apodemus, Suzuki et al., 2015;Hanazaki et al., 2017), and moles (genus Mogera, Nakamoto et al., 2021). In addition to these postglacial periods of rapid warming, i.e., the arrival of marine isotope stages (MIS) MIS 5e (ca. ...

Estimation of Evolutionary Rates of Mitochondrial DNA in Two Japanese Wood Mouse Species Based on Calibrations with Quaternary Environmental Changes
  • Citing Article
  • July 2017

ZOOLOGICAL SCIENCE