Polar and brown bear genomes reveal ancient admixture and demographic footprints of past climate change

Webb Miller, Stephan C. Schuster, Andreanna J. Welch, Aakrosh Ratan, Oscar C. Bedoya-Reinaa, Fangqing Zhao, Hie Lim Kim, Richard C. Burhans, Daniela I. Drautz, Nicola E. Wittekindt, Lynn P. Tomsho, Enrique Ibarra-Laclette, Luis Herrera-Estrella*, Elizabeth Peacock, Sean Farley, George K. Sage, Karyn Rode, Martyn Obbard, Rafael Montiel, Lutz BachmannÓlafur Ingólfsson, Jon Aars, Thomas Mailund, Øystein Wiig, Sandra L. Talbot, Charlotte Lindqvist

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

251 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Polar bears (PBs) are superbly adapted to the extreme Arctic environment and have become emblematic of the threat to biodiversity from global climate change. Their divergence from the lower-latitude brown bear provides a textbook example of rapid evolution of distinct phenotypes. However, limited mitochondrial and nuclear DNA evidence conflicts in the timing of PB origin as well as placement of the species within versus sister to the brown bear lineage. We gathered extensive genomic sequence data from contemporary polar, brown, and American black bear samples, in addition to a 130,000- to 110,000-y old PB, to examine this problem from a genome-wide perspective. Nuclear DNA markers reflect a species tree consistent with expectation, showing polar and brown bears to be sister species. However, for the enigmatic brown bears native to Alaska's Alexander Archipelago, we estimate that not only their mitochondrial genome, but also 5-10% of their nuclear genome, is most closely related to PBs, indicating ancient admixture between the two species. Explicit admixture analyses are consistent with ancient splits among PBs, brown bears and black bears that were later followed by occasional admixture. We also provide paleodemographic estimates that suggest bear evolution has tracked key climate events, and that PB in particular experienced a prolonged and dramatic decline in its effective population size during the last ca. 500,000 years. We demonstrate that brown bears and PBs have had sufficiently independent evolutionary histories over the last 4-5 million years to leave imprints in the PB nuclear genome that likely are associated with ecological adaptation to the Arctic environment.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E2382-E2390
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume109
Issue number36
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 4 2012
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • General

Keywords

  • Demographic history
  • Hybridization
  • Mammalian genomics
  • Phylogenetics

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Polar and brown bear genomes reveal ancient admixture and demographic footprints of past climate change'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this