A quick excursion from the humano-centric focus of this blog, in this occasion to the paleohistory of that fascinating social predator: the lion.
Ross Barnet et al., Revealing the maternal demographic history of Panthera leo using ancient DNA and a spatially explicit genealogical analysis. BMC Evolutionary Biology, 2014. Open access → LINK [doi:10.1186/1471-2148-14-70]
Abstract
Background
Understanding the demographic history of a population is critical to conservation and to our broader understanding of evolutionary processes. For many tropical large mammals, however, this aim is confounded by the absence of fossil material and by the misleading signal obtained from genetic data of recently fragmented and isolated populations. This is particularly true for the lion which as a consequence of millennia of human persecution, has large gaps in its natural distribution and several recently extinct populations.
Results
We sequenced mitochondrial DNA from museum-preserved individuals, including the extinct Barbary lion (Panthera leo leo) and Iranian lion (P. l. persica), as well as lions from West and Central Africa. We added these to a broader sample of lion sequences, resulting in a data set spanning the historical range of lions. Our Bayesian phylogeographical analyses provide evidence for highly supported, reciprocally monophyletic lion clades. Using a molecular clock, we estimated that recent lion lineages began to diverge in the Late Pleistocene. Expanding equatorial rainforest probably separated lions in South and East Africa from other populations. West African lions then expanded into Central Africa during periods of rainforest contraction. Lastly, we found evidence of two separate incursions into Asia from North Africa, first into India and later into the Middle East.
Conclusions
We have identified deep, well-supported splits within the mitochondrial phylogeny of African lions, arguing for recognition of some regional populations as worthy of independent conservation. More morphological and nuclear DNA data are now needed to test these subdivisions.
Modern lions originated somewhere in Africa, possibly towards the East or South of the continent, and spread from there. Asian lions originated in North Africa and migrated Eastwards more or less like humans did. However, according to the study's molecular clock estimates, they did so only in the Mousterian Pluvial and not in the Abbassia Pluvial, as we did.
The cave lion is a different (sub-)species, used in this study to root the phylogenetic tree.
Phylogenetic analyses of lion sequence data. A) Median network of 1051 bp of cytb for all 88 lion individuals identified from GenBank plus those generated in this study. Panthera leo spelaea was used as an outgroup. Circles are proportional to haplotype frequencies and black circles represent hypothesized intermediate haplotypes. The number of links represent the number of mutations between haplotypes. Haplotypes are labelled from A to S and correspond to sequences labelled in Table 1 and Additional file 3: Table S1. B) Phylogenetic tree from a Bayesian analysis of combined cytb and control region data for all lion taxa where available (n = 54). Posterior probabilities of supported clades are shown at nodes. Estimates of divergence times: (a) 124,200 years (95% credibility: 81,800-183,500); (b) 61,500 years (32,700-97,300); (c) 51,000 years (26,600-83,100); (d) 81,900 years (45,700-122,200); (e) 57,800 years (26,800-96,600); (f) 21,100 years (8300–38,800). Branch colours correspond to reconstructed ancestral geographic states (Purple, South Africa; Yellow, East Africa; Orange, West Africa; Red, Central Africa; Teal, North Africa; Blue, South Asia; Green, Near-East). Tip colours correspond to origins of samples. |
Domesticated african cattle originated in the fertile crescent
ReplyDeletehttp://www.pasthorizonspr.com/index.php/archives/03/2014/domesticated-african-cattle-originated-in-the-fertile-crescent
paper:
http://www.plosgenetics.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004254
took note, thanks
DeleteHow early were modern humans hunting large animals? If early modern human were preying on the same animals as lions, their migrations would probably be pretty similar, wouldn't they? Or at least the migrations of humans that weren't relying on coastal/marine resources.
ReplyDeleteThe migrations are not exactly the same: H. sapiens migrated to Asia long before lions did and other Homo species did the same even much much earlier. I would not relate them in any way.
DeleteHowever it is always possible that H. sapiens competed with the cave lion and other archaic lion species and that paved the way for the African lion to Asia (and parts of Europe also historically). Just speculating here.