Mitogenomic analysis of a late Pleistocene jaguar from North America

Author:

Srigyan Megha1ORCID,Schubert Blaine W2ORCID,Bushell Matthew2,Santos Sarah H D34ORCID,Figueiró Henrique Vieira45ORCID,Sacco Samuel1ORCID,Eizirik Eduardo4ORCID,Shapiro Beth16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Santa Cruz , Santa Cruz, CA , United States

2. Department of Geosciences, Center of Excellence in Paleontology, East Tennessee State University , Johnson City, TN , United States

3. Department of Biology, University of Western Ontario , London, ON , Canada

4. School of Health and Life Sciences, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul (PUCRS) , Porto Alegre , RS , Brazil

5. Environmental Genomics Group, Vale Institute of Technology , Belem, PA , Brazil

6. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California Santa Cruz , Santa Cruz, CA , United States

Abstract

Abstract The jaguar (Panthera onca) is the largest living cat species native to the Americas and one of few large American carnivorans to have survived into the Holocene. However, the extent to which jaguar diversity declined during the end-Pleistocene extinction event remains unclear. For example, Pleistocene jaguar fossils from North America are notably larger than the average extant jaguar, leading to hypotheses that jaguars from this continent represent a now-extinct subspecies (Panthera onca augusta) or species (Panthera augusta). Here, we used a hybridization capture approach to recover an ancient mitochondrial genome from a large, late Pleistocene jaguar from Kingston Saltpeter Cave, Georgia, United States, which we sequenced to 26-fold coverage. We then estimated the evolutionary relationship between the ancient jaguar mitogenome and those from other extinct and living large felids, including multiple jaguars sampled across the species’ current range. The ancient mitogenome falls within the diversity of living jaguars. All sampled jaguar mitogenomes share a common mitochondrial ancestor ~400 thousand years ago, indicating that the lineage represented by the ancient specimen dispersed into North America from the south at least once during the late Pleistocene. While genomic data from additional and older specimens will continue to improve understanding of Pleistocene jaguar diversity in the Americas, our results suggest that this specimen falls within the variation of extant jaguars despite the relatively larger size and geographic location and does not represent a distinct taxon.

Funder

NSF

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biotechnology

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