Hyena paleogenomes reveal a complex evolutionary history of cross-continental gene flow between spotted and cave hyena
View/ Open
Date
2020Author
Westbury, Michael V.
Hartmann, Stefanie
Barlow, Axel
Preick, Michaela
Ridush, Bogdan
Nagel, Doris
Rathgeber, Thomas
Ziegler, Reinhard
Baryshnikov, Gennady
Sheng, Guilian
Ludwig, Arne
Wiesel, Ingrid
Dalen, Love
Bibi, Faysal
Werdelin, Lars
Heller, Rasmus
Hofreiter, Michael
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The genus Crocuta (African spotted and Eurasian cave hyenas) includes several closely related extinct and
extant lineages. The relationships among these lineages, however, are contentious. Through the generation of
population-level paleogenomes from late Pleistocene Eurasian cave hyena and genomes from modern African
spotted hyena, we reveal the cross-continental evolutionary relationships between these enigmatic hyena lineages.
We find a deep divergence (~2.5 Ma) between African and Eurasian Crocuta populations, suggesting that ancestral
Crocuta left Africa around the same time as early Homo. Moreover, we find discordance between nuclear and
mitochondrial phylogenies and evidence for bidirectional gene flow between African and Eurasian Crocuta after
the lineages split, which may have complicated prior taxonomic classifications. Last, we find a number of introgressed
loci that attained high frequencies within the recipient lineage, suggesting some level of adaptive advantage
from admixture.