Insights into bear evolution from a Pleistocene polar bear genome

Author:

Lan Tianying12,Leppälä Kalle3,Tomlin Crystal1,Talbot Sandra L.4,Sage George K.4,Farley Sean D.5,Shideler Richard T.6,Bachmann Lutz7,Wiig Øystein7,Albert Victor A.1,Salojärvi Jarkko89,Mailund Thomas10,Drautz-Moses Daniela I.11,Schuster Stephan C.11ORCID,Herrera-Estrella Luis1213ORCID,Lindqvist Charlotte1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260

2. Daicel Arbor Biosciences, Ann Arbor, MI 48103

3. Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Oulu, 90014 Oulu, Finland

4. Far Northwestern Institute of Art and Science, Anchorage, AK 99501

5. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Anchorage, AK 99518

6. Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Fairbanks, AK 99701

7. Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, 0318 Oslo, Norway

8. School of Biological Sciences, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore 637551

9. Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, University of Helsinki, 00014 Helsinki, Finland

10. Bioinformatics Research Centre, Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus, Denmark

11. Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore 637551

12. Laboratorio Nacional de Genómica para la Biodiversidad/Unidad de Genómica Avanzada, Centro de Investigación y Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politecnico Nacional, 36500 Irapuato, México

13. Institute of Genomics for Crop Abiotic Stress Tolerance, Department of Plant and Soil Science, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX 79430

Abstract

The polar bear ( Ursus maritimus ) has become a symbol of the threat to biodiversity from climate change. Understanding polar bear evolutionary history may provide insights into apex carnivore responses and prospects during periods of extreme environmental perturbations. In recent years, genomic studies have examined bear speciation and population history, including evidence for ancient admixture between polar bears and brown bears ( Ursus arctos ). Here, we extend our earlier studies of a 130,000- to 115,000-y-old polar bear from the Svalbard Archipelago using a 10× coverage genome sequence and 10 new genomes of polar and brown bears from contemporary zones of overlap in northern Alaska. We demonstrate a dramatic decline in effective population size for this ancient polar bear’s lineage, followed by a modest increase just before its demise. A slightly higher genetic diversity in the ancient polar bear suggests a severe genetic erosion over a prolonged bottleneck in modern polar bears. Statistical fitting of data to alternative admixture graph scenarios favors at least one ancient introgression event from brown bears into the ancestor of polar bears, possibly dating back over 150,000 y. Gene flow was likely bidirectional, but allelic transfer from brown into polar bear is the strongest detected signal, which contrasts with other published work. These findings may have implications for our understanding of climate change impacts: Polar bears, a specialist Arctic lineage, may not only have undergone severe genetic bottlenecks but also been the recipient of generalist, boreal genetic variants from brown bears during critical phases of Northern Hemisphere glacial oscillations.

Funder

National Fish and Wildlife Foundation

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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