Genomic analysis supports Cape Lion population connectivity prior to colonial eradication and extinction.

IF 3 2区 生物学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Alida de Flamingh, Thomas P Gnoske, Angel G Rivera-Colón, Velizar A Simeonovski, Julian C Kerbis Peterhans, Nobuyuki Yamaguchi, Kelsey E Witt, Julian Catchen, Alfred L Roca, Ripan Singh Malhi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Cape lions (Panthera leo melanochaitus) formerly ranged throughout the grassland plains of the "Cape Flats" in what is today known as the Western Cape Province, South Africa. Cape lions were likely eradicated because of overhunting and habitat loss after European colonization. European naturalists originally described Cape lions as "black-maned lions" and claimed that they were phenotypically distinct. However, other depictions and historical descriptions of lions from the Cape report mixed or light coloration and without black or extensively developed manes. These findings suggest that, rather than forming a distinct population, Cape lions may have had phenotypic and genotypic variation similar to other African lions. Here we investigate Cape lion genome characteristics, population dynamics, and genetic distinctiveness prior to their extinction. We generated genomic data from 2 historic Cape lions to compare to 118 existing high-coverage mitogenomes, and low-coverage nuclear genomes of 53 lions from 13 African countries. We show that, before their eradication, lions from the Cape Flats had diverse mitogenomes and nuclear genomes that clustered with lions from both southern and eastern Africa. Cape lions had high genome-wide heterozygosity and low inbreeding coefficients, indicating that populations in the Cape Flats went extinct so rapidly that genomic effects associated with long-term small population size and isolation were not detectable. Our findings do not support the characterization of Cape lions as phylogeographically distinct, as originally put forth by some European naturalists, and illustrates how alternative knowledge systems, for example, Indigenous perspectives, could potentially further inform interpretations of species histories.

基因组分析表明,开普狮子种群在殖民地灭绝前具有连通性。
开普狮子(Panthera leo melanochaitus)以前遍布 "开普平原 "的草原平原,即今天的南非西开普省。欧洲殖民统治后,由于过度捕猎和栖息地丧失,开普狮很可能已经绝迹。欧洲博物学家最初将开普狮子描述为 "黑鬃狮",并声称它们在表型上与众不同。然而,其他关于开普省狮子的描述和历史描述却显示,狮子的体色为混合色或浅色,没有黑色或发达的鬃毛。这些发现表明,开普省的狮子并没有形成一个独特的种群,它们的表型和基因型变异可能与其他非洲狮子类似。在此,我们研究了开普狮灭绝前的基因组特征、种群动态和遗传独特性。我们从两只历史上的开普狮子那里获得了基因组数据,并与现有的 118 个高覆盖率有丝分裂基因组和来自 13 个非洲国家的 53 只狮子的低覆盖率核基因组进行了比较。我们的研究表明,开普平原的狮子在被消灭之前,其有丝分裂基因组和核基因组具有多样性,并与非洲南部和东部的狮子聚集在一起。开普省的狮子具有较高的全基因组杂合度和较低的近亲繁殖系数,这表明开普省的狮子种群灭绝得太快,以至于无法检测到与长期小种群规模和隔离有关的基因组效应。我们的研究结果并不支持最初由一些欧洲博物学家提出的将开普狮描述为在系统地理学上与众不同的物种的观点,并说明了替代知识系统(如土著观点)如何有可能进一步解释物种的生活史。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Heredity
Journal of Heredity 生物-遗传学
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
6.50%
发文量
63
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Over the last 100 years, the Journal of Heredity has established and maintained a tradition of scholarly excellence in the publication of genetics research. Virtually every major figure in the field has contributed to the journal. Established in 1903, Journal of Heredity covers organismal genetics across a wide range of disciplines and taxa. Articles include such rapidly advancing fields as conservation genetics of endangered species, population structure and phylogeography, molecular evolution and speciation, molecular genetics of disease resistance in plants and animals, genetic biodiversity and relevant computer programs.
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