Genetic diversity and population structure of Himalayan tahr (Hemitragus jemlahicus) from Western Himalaya
Author:
Singh Vinaya Kumar1ORCID, Joshi Bheem Dutt1ORCID, Dalui Supriyo1ORCID, Ghosh Avijit1ORCID, Jabin Gul1ORCID, Sharief Amira1ORCID, Kumar Vineet1ORCID, Singh Hemant1ORCID, Singh Sujeet Kumar12ORCID, Chandra Kailash1ORCID, Sharma Lalit Kumar1ORCID, Thakur Mukesh1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Zoological Survey of India , New Alipore , Kolkata 700053 , West Bengal , India 2. Amity Institute of Forestry and Wildlife, Amity University , Sector-125 , Noida 201303 , India
Abstract
Abstract
Himalayan tahr is a group-living animal of high-altitude Himalaya, distributed all across the subalpine range that also formed an important prey base for large carnivores in Himalaya. The species is threatened due to habitat fragmentation, illegal poaching, and anthropogenic activities. We undertook population genetic assessment of Himalayan tahr from Western Himalaya and observed comparable genetic diversity at both mitochondrial and nuclear microsatellite loci. Bayesian skyline plots showed stable demography in the past several thousand years. We identified 27 unique individuals with a select panel of seven loci and the Bayesian structure analysis inferred two genetic clusters. The present study is the first report on the population genetic make-up of Himalayan tahr and can be used for long-term genetic monitoring of the species.
Funder
Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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