“…In that context, the aim, however, was not primarily to address overall evolutionary relationships, as using exclusively mitochondrial markers would not be appropriate, given introgression and selection in mtDNA; rather, our focus was on revealing phylogenetic relationships to classify the relative ancestral or derived status of each protein for the co-evolution analysis. The obtained results by both mitochondrial loci are by and large congruent with existing molecular and morphological data for phylogenetic inference for most of the hare taxa studied here: L. europaeus (Kasapidis et al, 2005;Sert, Ben Slimen, Erdogan, & Suchentrunk, 2009;Stamatis et al, 2009;Suchentrunk, Alkon, Willing, & Yom-Tov, 2000;Suchentrunk, Mamuris, Sfougaris, & Stamatis, 2003), L. corsicanus, L. castroviejoi, L. timidus, L. granatensis (Alves et al, 2003Alves & Hacklander, 2008;Melo-Ferreira et al, 2005), and L. habessinicus (Tolesa et al, 2017). The results of the three Mexican hare species analyzed here are also concordant with earlier findings (Cervantes, Lorenzo, & Yates, 2002) that suggested a close relationship between L. flavigularis, L. callotis, and L. californicus based on analysis of 31 allozyme loci.…”