Mid-Pleistocene Transitions Forced Himalayan ibex to Evolve Independently after Split into an Allopatric Refugium

Author:

Jabin Gul12,Joshi Bheem Dutt1ORCID,Wang Ming-Shan3,Mukherjee Tanoy1ORCID,Dolker Stanzin12ORCID,Wang Sheng4,Chandra Kailash1,Chinnadurai Venkatraman5,Sharma Lalit Kumar1ORCID,Thakur Mukesh1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata 700053, India

2. Department of Zoology, University of Calcutta, Kolkata 700019, India

3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA

4. Kunming Institute of Zoology, Kunming 650223, China

5. Zoological Survey of India, Marine Biology Regional Centre (MBRC), Chennai 600028, India

Abstract

Pleistocene glaciations had profound impact on the spatial distribution and genetic makeup of species in temperate ecosystems. While the glacial period trapped several species into glacial refugia and caused abrupt decline in large populations, the interglacial period facilitated population growth and range expansion leading to allopatric speciation. Here, we analyzed 40 genomes of four species of ibex and found that Himalayan ibex in the Pamir Mountains evolved independently after splitting from its main range about 0.1 mya following the Pleistocene species pump concept. Demographic trajectories showed Himalayan ibex experienced two historic bottlenecks, one each c. 0.8–0.5 mya and c. 50–30 kya, with an intermediate large population expansion c. 0.2–0.16 mya coinciding with Mid-Pleistocene Transitions. We substantiate with multi-dimensional evidence that Himalayan ibex is an evolutionary distinct phylogenetic species of Siberian ibex which need to be prioritized as Capra himalayensis for taxonomic revision and conservation planning at a regional and global scale.

Funder

National Mission for Himalayan Studies, Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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