How genomic insights into the evolutionary history of clouded leopards inform their conservation
PúblicoDeposited
Creator
Yuan, Jiaqing
()
Wang, Guiqiang
()
Zhao, Le
()
Kitchener, Andrew C
()
Sun, Ting
()
Chen, Wu
()
Huang, Chen
Wang, Chen
()
Xu, Xiao
Wang, Jinhong
()
Lu, Huimeng
()
Xu, Lulu
()
Jiangzuo, Qigao
()
Murphy, William J
()
Wu, Dongdong
()
Li, Gang
()
2023
Añadir a la colección
No tiene acceso a ninguna colección existente. Puedes crear una nueva colección.
Abstract
Clouded leopards ( spp.), a morphologically and ecologically distinct lineage of big cats, are severely threatened by habitat loss and fragmentation, targeted hunting, and other human activities. The long-held poor understanding of their genetics and evolution has undermined the effectiveness of conservation actions. Here, we report a comprehensive investigation of the whole genomes, population genetics, and adaptive evolution of . Our results indicate the genus arose during the Pleistocene, coinciding with glacial-induced climate changes to the distributions of savannas and rainforests, and signatures of natural selection associated with genes functioning in tooth, pigmentation, and tail development, associated with clouded leopards’ unique adaptations. Our study highlights high-altitude adaptation as the main factor driving nontaxonomic population differentiation in . Population declines and inbreeding have led to reduced genetic diversity and the accumulation of deleterious variation that likely affect reproduction of clouded leopards, highlighting the urgent need for effective conservation efforts.
Genomic research illuminates the evolutionary history and conservation urgency of clouded leopards.