Tracing Eastern Wolf Origins From Whole-Genome Data in Context of Extensive Hybridization

Author:

Vilaça Sibelle T12ORCID,Donaldson Michael E1,Benazzo Andrea2,Wheeldon Tyler J3,Vizzari Maria Teresa2,Bertorelle Giorgio2,Patterson Brent R3,Kyle Christopher J14

Affiliation:

1. Environmental and Life Sciences Graduate Program, Trent University , Ontario , Canada

2. Department of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, University of Ferrara , Ferrara , Italy

3. Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry, Wildlife Research and Monitoring Section, Trent University , Ontario , Canada

4. Forensic Science Department, Trent University , Ontario , Canada

Abstract

AbstractSoutheastern Canada is inhabited by an amalgam of hybridizing wolf-like canids, raising fundamental questions regarding their taxonomy, origins, and timing of hybridization events. Eastern wolves (Canis lycaon), specifically, have been the subject of significant controversy, being viewed as either a distinct taxonomic entity of conservation concern or a recent hybrid of coyotes (C. latrans) and grey wolves (C. lupus). Mitochondrial DNA analyses show some evidence of eastern wolves being North American evolved canids. In contrast, nuclear genome studies indicate eastern wolves are best described as a hybrid entity, but with unclear timing of hybridization events. To test hypotheses related to these competing findings we sequenced whole genomes of 25 individuals, representative of extant Canadian wolf-like canid types of known origin and levels of contemporary hybridization. Here we present data describing eastern wolves as a distinct taxonomic entity that evolved separately from grey wolves for the past ∼67,000 years with an admixture event with coyotes ∼37,000 years ago. We show that Great Lakes wolves originated as a product of admixture between grey wolves and eastern wolves after the last glaciation (∼8,000 years ago) while eastern coyotes originated as a product of admixture between “western” coyotes and eastern wolves during the last century. Eastern wolf nuclear genomes appear shaped by historical and contemporary gene flow with grey wolves and coyotes, yet evolutionary uniqueness remains among eastern wolves currently inhabiting a restricted range in southeastern Canada.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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