Genome‐wide SNP assessment of contemporary European red deer genetic structure highlights the distinction of peripheral populations and the main admixture zones in Europe

Author:

Carranza Juan1ORCID,Pérez‐González Javier2,Anaya Gabriel1,de Jong Menno3,Broggini Camilla1,Zachos Frank E.4567,McDevitt Allan D.8,Niedziałkowska Magdalena9ORCID,Sykut Maciej9,Csányi Sándor10,Bleier Norber11,Csirke Lázló11,Røed Knut12,Saint‐Andrieux Christine13,Barboiron Aurelie13,Gort‐Esteve Araceli14,Ruiz‐Olmo Jordi15,Seoane Jose Manuel1,Godoy Jose Antonio16ORCID,Mackiewicz Paweł17,de la Peña Eva118,Vedel Giovanni1,McFarlane S. Eryn1920ORCID,Pemberton Josephine20,Membrillo Alberto1

Affiliation:

1. Wildlife Research Unit (UIRCP) University of Córdoba Córdoba Spain

2. Biology and Ethology Unit, Veterinary Faculty University of Extremadura Cáceres Spain

3. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Institute (SBiK‐F) Frankfurt am Main Germany

4. Natural History Museum Vienna Vienna Austria

5. Department of Genetics, University of the Free State Bloemfontein South Africa

6. Department of Evolutionary Biology University of Vienna Vienna Austria

7. Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods Charles Darwin University Casuarina Northwest Territories Australia

8. Department of Natural Resources and the Environment Atlantic Technological University Galway Ireland

9. Mammal Research Institute Polish Academy of Sciences Białowieża Poland

10. Department of Wildlife Biology and Management Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences (MATE) Gödöllő Hungary

11. Department of Game Management Ministry of Agriculture Budapest Hungary

12. Department of Preclinical Sciences and Pathology Norwegian University of Life Sciences Ås Norway

13. French Biodiversity Agency Vincennes France

14. Department of Animal and Food Science Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Barcelona Spain

15. Direcció General d'Ecosistemes Forestals i Gestió del Medi Barcelona Spain

16. Department of Integrative Ecology Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC) Seville Spain

17. Faculty of Biotechnology University of Wrocław Wrocław Poland

18. Instituto de Investigación en Recursos Cinegéticos IREC (CSIC, UCLM, JCCM) Ciudad Real Spain

19. Department of Biology York University Toronto Ontario Canada

20. Institute of Ecology and Evolution, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

Abstract

AbstractGenome‐wide technologies open up new possibilities to clarify questions on genetic structure and phylogeographic history of taxa previously studied with microsatellite loci and mitochondrial sequences. Here, we used 736 individual red deer (Cervus elaphus) samples genotyped at 35,701 single nucleotide polymorphism loci (SNPs) to assess the population structure of the species throughout Europe. The results identified 28 populations, with higher degrees of genetic distinction in peripheral compared to mainland populations. Iberian red deer show high genetic differentiation, with lineages in Western and Central Iberia maintaining their distinctiveness, which supports separate refugial ranges within Iberia along with little recent connection between Iberian and the remaining Western European populations. The Norwegian population exhibited the lowest variability and the largest allele frequency differences from mainland European populations, compatible with a history of bottlenecks and drift during post‐glacial colonization from southern refugia. Scottish populations showed high genetic distance from the mainland but high levels of diversity. Hybrid zones were found between Eastern and Western European lineages in Central Europe as well as in the Pyrenees, where red deer from France are in close contact with Iberian red deer. Anthropogenic restocking has promoted the Pyrenean contact zone, admixture events in populations on the Isle of Rum and in the Netherlands, and at least partly the admixture of the two main lineages in central‐eastern Europe. Our analysis enabled detailed resolution of population structure of a large mammal widely distributed throughout Europe and contributes to resolving the evolutionary history, which can also inform conservation and management policies.

Publisher

Wiley

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