Ancient mtDNA from the extinct Indian cheetah supports unexpectedly deep divergence from African cheetahs

Author:

Rai Niraj,Verma Sunil Kumar,Gaur AjayORCID,Iliescu Florin Mircea,Thakur MukeshORCID,Golla Tirupathi Rao,Chandra Kailash,Prakash Satya,Tabasum Wajeeda,Ara Sreenivas,Singh Lalji,Thangaraj Kumarasamy,Jacobs Guy S.

Abstract

AbstractThe Indian cheetah was hunted to extinction by the mid-20th century. While analysis of 139 bp of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has confirmed that the Indian cheetah was part of the Asiatic subspecies (Acinonyx jubatus venaticus), the detailed relationships between cheetah populations remains unclear due to limited genetic data. We clarify these relationships by studying larger fragments of cheetah mtDNA, both from an Indian cheetah museum specimen and two African cheetah, one modern and one historic, imported into India at different times. Our results suggest that the most recent common ancestor of cheetah mtDNA is approximately twice as ancient as currently recognised. The Indian and Southeast African (Acinonyx jubatus jubatus) cheetah mtDNA diverged approximately 72 kya, while the Southeast and Northeast African (Acinonyx jubatus soemmeringii) cheetah mtDNA diverged around 139 kya. Additionally, the historic African cheetah sampled from India proved to have an A. j. jubatus haplotype, suggesting a hitherto unrecognised South African route of cheetah importation into India in the 19th century. Together, our results provide a deeper understanding of the relationships between cheetah subspecies, and have important implications for the conservation of A. j. venaticus and potential reintroduction of cheetahs into India.

Funder

Nanyang Technological University

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference35 articles.

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