Ancient DNA reveals genetic admixture in China during tiger evolution

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Yue Chen Liu
  • Mikhail P. Tiunov
  • Dmitry O. Gimranov
  • Yan Zhuang
  • Yu Han
  • Carlos A. Driscoll
  • Yuhong Pang
  • Chunmei Li
  • Yan Pan
  • Rui Zheng Yang
  • Bao Guo Li
  • Kun Jin
  • Xiao Xu
  • Olga Uphyrkina
  • Yanyi Huang
  • Xiao Hong Wu
  • Stephen J. O’Brien
  • Nobuyuki Yamaguchi
  • Shu-Jin Luo

The tiger (Panthera tigris) is a charismatic megafauna species that originated and diversified in Asia and probably experienced population contraction and expansion during the Pleistocene, resulting in low genetic diversity of modern tigers. However, little is known about patterns of genomic diversity in ancient populations. Here we generated whole-genome sequences from ancient or historical (100–10,000 yr old) specimens collected across mainland Asia, including a 10,600-yr-old Russian Far East specimen (RUSA21, 8× coverage) plus six ancient mitogenomes, 14 South China tigers (0.1–12×) and three Caspian tigers (4–8×). Admixture analysis showed that RUSA21 clustered within modern Northeast Asian phylogroups and partially derived from an extinct Late Pleistocene lineage. While some of the 8,000–10,000-yr-old Russian Far East mitogenomes are basal to all tigers, one 2,000-yr-old specimen resembles present Amur tigers. Phylogenomic analyses suggested that the Caspian tiger probably dispersed from an ancestral Northeast Asian population and experienced gene flow from southern Bengal tigers. Lastly, genome-wide monophyly supported the South China tiger as a distinct subspecies, albeit with mitochondrial paraphyly, hence resolving its longstanding taxonomic controversy. The distribution of mitochondrial haplogroups corroborated by biogeographical modelling suggested that Southwest China was a Late Pleistocene refugium for a relic basal lineage. As suitable habitat returned, admixture between divergent lineages of South China tigers took place in Eastern China, promoting the evolution of other northern subspecies. Altogether, our analysis of ancient genomes sheds light on the evolutionary history of tigers and supports the existence of nine modern subspecies.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNature Ecology and Evolution
Volume7
Issue number11
Pages (from-to)1914-1929
Number of pages29
ISSN2397-334X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.

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