BEHAVIORAL AND PHYSIOLOGICAL-CHARACTERISTICS OF STANDARD AND CHROMOSOMALLY DIVERGENT POPULATIONS OF HOUSE MICE FROM THE ORKNEY ARCHIPELAGO (SCOTLAND)

Authors
Citation
G. Ganem, BEHAVIORAL AND PHYSIOLOGICAL-CHARACTERISTICS OF STANDARD AND CHROMOSOMALLY DIVERGENT POPULATIONS OF HOUSE MICE FROM THE ORKNEY ARCHIPELAGO (SCOTLAND), Acta Theriologica, 43(1), 1998, pp. 23-38
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00017051
Volume
43
Issue
1
Year of publication
1998
Pages
23 - 38
Database
ISI
SICI code
0001-7051(1998)43:1<23:BAPOSA>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
House mice Mus musculus domesticus (Schwartz and Schwartz, 1943) from Orkney are closely related on the basis of mandible morphology and all ozyme variation. In three of the twenty islands where house mice occur populations have diverged from the standard 2n = 40 karyotype through fixation of Robertsonian (Rb) chromosomal mutations. Mice from Westra y island carry 36 chromosomes and share one Rb fusion with those from Eday and Faray (2n = 34; 2n = 34-36). These islands are geographically very close to each other and to islands carrying standard mice. Behav ioural and ecophysiological analyses were performed on the three chrom osomally divergent populations of mice as well as on two nearby standa rd populations (Sanday and Papa-Westray). The aim of the study was to assess whether divergences attributable to chromosomal changes occur, and to discuss whether behavioural divergences may explain the non-mix ing of karyotypes. The study does not reveal any divergence between is lands attributable to karyotype or habitat differences. The non-blendi ng of the different karyotypes present in Orkney is discussed with ref erence to history of colonisation, human behaviour, and the consequenc es of site saturation. Particular characteristics displayed by the dif ferent island-populations suggest that in the near future the present pattern of karyotype variation observed in Orkney could change.