4.8 Article

High genetic diversity and low differentiation reflect the ecological versatility of the African leopard

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages 1862-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.01.064

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Innovation Fund Denmark
  2. Candys Foundation
  3. Alfred Benzon Fund
  4. Villum Foundation Young investigator grant [VKR023447, 19114]
  5. Danish Research Council Sapere Aude grant [DFF8049-00098B]
  6. Lundbeck Foundation [R215-2015-4174]
  7. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF96]

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Research reveals that the genomic diversity of African leopards is higher than that of other large cats, likely due to their exceptionally high effective population size maintained throughout the Pleistocene. Compared to other large cats, African leopards exhibit ongoing gene flow and very low population differentiation within their population.
Large carnivores are generally sensitive to ecosystem changes because their specialized diet and position at the top of the trophic pyramid is associated with small population sizes. Accordingly, low genetic diversity at the whole-genome level has been reported for all big cat species, including the widely distributed leopard. However, all previous whole-genome analyses of leopards are based on the Far Eastern Amur leopards that live at the extremity of the species' distribution and therefore are not necessarily representative of the whole species. We sequenced 53 whole genomes of African leopards. Strikingly, we found that the genomic diversity in the African leopard is 2- to 5-fold higher than in other big cats, including the Amur leopard, likely because of an exceptionally high effective population size maintained by the African leopard throughout the Pleistocene. Furthermore, we detected ongoing gene flow and very low population differentiation within African leopards compared with those of other big cats. We corroborated this by showing a complete absence of an otherwise ubiquitous equatorial forest barrier to gene flow. This sets the leopard apart from most other widely distributed large African mammals, including lions. These results revise our understanding of trophic sensitivity and highlight the remarkable resilience of the African leopard, likely because of its extraordinary habitat versatility and broad dietary niche.

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