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Uncovering the enigmatic evolution of bears in greater depth: The hybrid origin of the Asiatic black bear.

Tiantian ZouWeimin KuangTingting YinLaurent Alain François FrantzChang ZhangJian-Quan LiuHong WuLi Yu
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Bears are fascinating mammals because of their complex pattern of speciation and rapid evolution of distinct phenotypes. Interspecific hybridization has been common and has shaped the complex evolutionary history of bears. In this study, based on the largest population-level genomic dataset to date involving all Ursinae species and recently developed methods for detecting hybrid speciation, we provide explicit evidence for the hybrid origin of Asiatic black bears, which arose through historical hybridization between the ancestor of polar bear/brown bear/American black bears and the ancestor of sun bear/sloth bears. This was inferred to have occurred soon after the divergence of the two parental lineages in Eurasia due to climate-driven population expansion and dispersal. In addition, we found that the intermediate body size of this hybrid species arose from its combination of relevant genes derived from two parental lineages of contrasting sizes. This and alternate fixation of numerous other loci that had diverged between parental lineages may have initiated the reproductive isolation of the Asiatic black bear from its two parents. Our study sheds further light on the evolutionary history of bears and documents the importance of hybridization in new species formation and phenotypic evolution in mammals.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • single molecule
  • minimally invasive
  • dna methylation
  • transcription factor
  • optical coherence tomography
  • organic matter