Recent increase in species-wide diversity after interspecies introgression in the highly endangered Iberian lynx
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Abstract
Genetic diversity is lost in small and isolated populations, affecting many
globally declining species. Interspecific admixture events can increase
genetic variation in the recipient species’ gene pool, but empirical examples
of species-wide restoration of genetic diversity by admixture are lacking.
Here we present multi-fold coverage genomic data from three ancient
Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) approximately 2,000–4,000 years old and
show a continuous or recurrent process of interspecies admixture with
the Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx) that increased modern Iberian lynx genetic
diversity above that occurring millennia ago despite its recent demographic
decline. Our results add to the accumulating evidence for natural
admixture and introgression among closely related species and show that
this can result in an increase of species-wide genetic diversity in highly
genetically eroded species. The strict avoidance of interspecific sources in
current genetic restoration measures needs to be carefully reconsidered,
particularly in cases where no conspecific source population exists.
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Bibliographic citation
Lucena-Perez, M., Paijmans, J. L. A., Nocete, F., Nadal, J., Detry, C., Dalén, L., Hofreiter, M., Barlow, A., & Godoy, J. A. (2024). Recent increase in species-wide diversity after interspecies introgression in the highly endangered Iberian lynx. In Nature Ecology & Evolution. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-023-02267-7











