In Search of the Elusive North: Evolutionary History of the Arctic Fox (Vulpes lagopus) in the Palearctic from the Late Pleistocene to the Recent Inferred from Mitogenomic Data

Author:

Panitsina Valentina A.1ORCID,Bodrov Semyon Yu.1,Boulygina Eugenia S.2,Slobodova Natalia V.3,Kosintsev Pavel A.4,Abramson Natalia I.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, 199034 Saint-Petersburg, Russia

2. National Research Center “Kurchatov Institute”, 123182 Moscow, Russia

3. Faculty of Biology and Biotechnology, HSE University, 101000 Moscow, Russia

4. Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology, Ural Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences, 620144 Yekaterinburg, Russia

Abstract

Despite the high level of interest, the population history of arctic foxes during the Late Pleistocene and Holocene remains poorly understood. Here we aimed to fill gaps in the demographic and colonization history of the arctic fox by analyzing new ancient DNA data from fossil specimens aged from 50 to 1 thousand years from the Northern and Polar Urals, historic DNA from museum specimens from the Novaya Zemlya Archipelago and the Taymyr Peninsula and supplementing these data by previously published sequences of recent and extinct arctic foxes from other regions. This dataset was used for reconstruction of a time-calibrated phylogeny and a temporal haplotype network covering four time intervals: Late Pleistocene (ranging from 30 to 13 thousand years bp), Holocene (ranging from 4 to 1 thousand years bp), historical (approximately 150 years), and modern. Our results revealed that Late Pleistocene specimens showed no genetic similarity to either modern or historical specimens, thus supporting the earlier hypothesis on local extinction rather than habitat tracking.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation

State research theme

RFBR

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

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

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