4.6 Article

Ancient DNA from the Asiatic Wild Dog (Cuon alpinus) from Europe

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12020144

Keywords

Cuon alpinus; dhole; ancient DNA; mitogenome; hybridisation capture; canids

Funding

  1. ERC [310763 GeneFlow]
  2. EEA Grants 2014-2021 [126/2019 (KARSTHIVES 2)]

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The Asiatic wild dog, once widespread throughout Eurasia and even reaching North America during the Pleistocene, is now largely restricted to South and Southeast Asia. The fossil record of the dhole is scattered and complicated by overlap in size and morphology with other canid species. Genetic data has been essential in identifying species affiliation of fossil specimens. Ancient dhole sequences show high divergence from modern dhole sequences, but the scarcity of data limits a more comprehensive analysis.
The Asiatic wild dog (Cuon alpinus), restricted today largely to South and Southeast Asia, was widespread throughout Eurasia and even reached North America during the Pleistocene. Like many other species, it suffered from a huge range loss towards the end of the Pleistocene and went extinct in most of its former distribution. The fossil record of the dhole is scattered and the identification of fossils can be complicated by an overlap in size and a high morphological similarity between dholes and other canid species. We generated almost complete mitochondrial genomes for six putative dhole fossils from Europe. By using three lines of evidence, i.e., the number of reads mapping to various canid mitochondrial genomes, the evaluation and quantification of the mapping evenness along the reference genomes and phylogenetic analysis, we were able to identify two out of six samples as dhole, whereas four samples represent wolf fossils. This highlights the contribution genetic data can make when trying to identify the species affiliation of fossil specimens. The ancient dhole sequences are highly divergent when compared to modern dhole sequences, but the scarcity of dhole data for comparison impedes a more extensive analysis.

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