| Literature DB >> 31628318 |
Nedda F Saremi1, Megan A Supple2, Ashley Byrne3, James A Cahill2,4, Luiz Lehmann Coutinho5, Love Dalén6, Henrique V Figueiró7, Warren E Johnson8,9, Heather J Milne2, Stephen J O'Brien10, Brendan O'Connell1,11, David P Onorato12, Seth P D Riley13,14, Jeff A Sikich13, Daniel R Stahler15, Priscilla Marqui Schmidt Villela16, Christopher Vollmers1, Robert K Wayne14, Eduardo Eizirik7, Russell B Corbett-Detig1, Richard E Green1, Christopher C Wilmers17, Beth Shapiro18,19.
Abstract
Pumas are the most widely distributed felid in the Western Hemisphere. Increasingly, however, human persecution and habitat loss are isolating puma populations. To explore the genomic consequences of this isolation, we assemble a draft puma genome and a geographically broad panel of resequenced individuals. We estimate that the lineage leading to present-day North American pumas diverged from South American lineages 300-100 thousand years ago. We find signatures of close inbreeding in geographically isolated North American populations, but also that tracts of homozygosity are rarely shared among these populations, suggesting that assisted gene flow would restore local genetic diversity. The genome of a Florida panther descended from translocated Central American individuals has long tracts of homozygosity despite recent outbreeding. This suggests that while translocations may introduce diversity, sustaining diversity in small and isolated populations will require either repeated translocations or restoration of landscape connectivity. Our approach provides a framework for genome-wide analyses that can be applied to the management of similarly small and isolated populations.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31628318 PMCID: PMC6800433 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-12741-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919