Historical biogeography of the leopard (Panthera pardus) and its extinct Eurasian populations.
Johanna L A PaijmansAxel BarlowDaniel W FörsterKirstin HennebergerMatthias MeyerBirgit NickelDoris NagelRasmus Worsøe HavmøllerGennady F BaryshnikovUlrich JogerWilfried RosendahlMichael HofreiterPublished in: BMC evolutionary biology (2018)
The phylogenetic placement of the ancient European leopard as sister group to Asian leopards suggests that these populations originate from the same out-of-Africa dispersal which founded the Asian lineages. The coalescence time found for the mitochondrial lineages aligns well with the earliest undisputed fossils in Eurasia, and thus encourages a re-evaluation of the identification of the much older putative leopard fossils from the region. The relatively recent ancestry of all mainland Asian leopard lineages suggests that these populations underwent a severe population bottleneck during the Pleistocene. Finally, although only based on a single sample, the unexpected phylogenetic placement of the Javan leopard could be interpreted as evidence for exchange of mitochondrial lineages between Java and mainland Asia, calling for further investigation into the evolutionary history of this subspecies.