Snow leopard phylogeography and population structure supports two global populations with single refugial origin

Published Article

Asia Pacific

Publication date: October 12, 2024

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Genetic analyses of 182 snow leopards reveal little phylogeographic structure and a likely single glacial refugial origin. Two global genetic groups emerge, with historical and contemporary patterns differing. The study underscores using genetic data to define conservation units and protect the species’ adaptive potential.

Subject Tags

  • Data Science and Artificial Intelligence
  • Wildlife
  • Biodiversity

Abstract

Snow leopards (Panthera uncia) inhabit the mountainous regions of High Asia, which experienced serial glacial contraction and expansion during climatic cycles of the Pleistocene. The corresponding impacts of glacial vicariance may have alternately promoted or constrained genetic differentiation to shape the distribution of genetic lineages and population structure. We studied snow leopard phylogeography across High Asia by examining range-wide historical and contemporary genetic structure with mitochondrial DNA and microsatellite markers. We genotyped 182 individuals from across snow leopard range and sequenced portions of the mitogenome in a spatially stratified subset of 80 individuals to infer historical biogeographic and contemporary patterns of genetic diversity. We observed a lack of phylogeographic structure, and analyses suggested a single refugial origin for all sampled populations. Molecular data provided tentative evidence of a hypothesized glacial refugia in the Tian Shan-Pamir-Hindu Kush-Karakoram mountain ranges, and detected mixed signatures of population expansion. Concordant assessments of microsatellite data indicated two global genetic populations, though we detected geographic differences between historical and contemporary population structure and connectivity inferred from mitochondrial and microsatellite data, respectively. Using the largest sample size and geographic coverage to date, we demonstrate novel information on the phylogeographic history of snow leopards, and corroborate existing interpretations of snow leopard connectivity and genetic structure. We recommend that conservation efforts incorporate genetic data to define and protect meaningful conservation units and their underlying genetic diversity, and to maintain the snow leopard’s adaptive potential and continued resilience to environmental changes.

Citation

Cancellare, I.A., Weckworth, B., Caragiulo, A., Pilgrim, K.L., McCarthy, T.M., Abdullaev, A., Amato, G., Bian, X., Bykova, E., Dias-Freedman, I. and Gritsina, M., 2024. Snow leopard phylogeography and population structure supports two global populations with single refugial origin. Biodiversity and Conservation33(14), pp.3961-3979. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10531-024-02928-4 

TNC Authors

  • Tom Rooney
    Sustainable Forest Director, Ohio
    The Nature Conservancy
    Email: tom.rooney@tnc.org