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1.
Sci Adv ; 6(11): eaay0456, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32201717

ABSTRACT

The genus Crocuta (African spotted and Eurasian cave hyenas) includes several closely related extinct and extant lineages. The relationships among these lineages, however, are contentious. Through the generation of population-level paleogenomes from late Pleistocene Eurasian cave hyena and genomes from modern African spotted hyena, we reveal the cross-continental evolutionary relationships between these enigmatic hyena lineages. We find a deep divergence (~2.5 Ma) between African and Eurasian Crocuta populations, suggesting that ancestral Crocuta left Africa around the same time as early Homo. Moreover, we find discordance between nuclear and mitochondrial phylogenies and evidence for bidirectional gene flow between African and Eurasian Crocuta after the lineages split, which may have complicated prior taxonomic classifications. Last, we find a number of introgressed loci that attained high frequencies within the recipient lineage, suggesting some level of adaptive advantage from admixture.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Gene Flow , Genetics, Population , Genome , Hyaenidae/genetics , Animals , Genome, Mitochondrial , Phylogeny , Phylogeography
2.
Sci Rep ; 7: 44585, 2017 03 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28327635

ABSTRACT

Near the end of the Pleistocene epoch, populations of the woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) were distributed across parts of three continents, from western Europe and northern Asia through Beringia to the Atlantic seaboard of North America. Nonetheless, questions about the connectivity and temporal continuity of mammoth populations and species remain unanswered. We use a combination of targeted enrichment and high-throughput sequencing to assemble and interpret a data set of 143 mammoth mitochondrial genomes, sampled from fossils recovered from across their Holarctic range. Our dataset includes 54 previously unpublished mitochondrial genomes and significantly increases the coverage of the Eurasian range of the species. The resulting global phylogeny confirms that the Late Pleistocene mammoth population comprised three distinct mitochondrial lineages that began to diverge ~1.0-2.0 million years ago (Ma). We also find that mammoth mitochondrial lineages were strongly geographically partitioned throughout the Pleistocene. In combination, our genetic results and the pattern of morphological variation in time and space suggest that male-mediated gene flow, rather than large-scale dispersals, was important in the Pleistocene evolutionary history of mammoths.


Subject(s)
Animal Distribution , Biological Evolution , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Genome, Mitochondrial , Mammoths/genetics , Phylogeny , Animals , Asia , Europe , Extinction, Biological , Female , Fossils , Gene Flow , Male , Mammoths/classification , North America , Phylogeography , Sequence Analysis, DNA
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