Phylogeography, Population History and Conservation Genetics of Jaguars (, Mammalia, Felidae)
Phylogeography, Population History and Conservation Genetics of Jaguars (, Mammalia, Felidae)
Phylogeography, Population History and Conservation Genetics of Jaguars (, Mammalia, Felidae)
Phylogeography, population history and conservation genetics of jaguars (Panthera onca, Mammalia, Felidae)
E D U A R D O E I Z I R I K , * J A E - H E U P K I M , * M A R I LY N M E N O T T I - R AY M O N D , * P E T E R G . C R AW S H AW J R . , S T E P H E N J . O B R I E N * and WA R R E N E . J O H N S O N * *Laboratory of Genomic Diversity, National Cancer Institute FCRDC, Frederick, MD 217021201, USA, Department of Biology, University of Maryland at College Park, USA, CENAP/IBAMA, C.P. 295, Araoiaba da Serra, SP 18190000, Brazil
Abstract
The jaguar ( Panthera onca), the largest felid in the American Continent, is currently threatened by habitat loss, fragmentation and human persecution. We have investigated the genetic diversity, population structure and demographic history of jaguars across their geographical range by analysing 715 base pairs of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region and 29 microsatellite loci in 40 individuals sampled from Mexico to southern Brazil. Jaguars display low to moderate levels of mtDNA diversity and medium to high levels of microsatellite size variation, and show evidence of a recent demographic expansion. We estimate that extant jaguar mtDNA lineages arose 280 000510 000 years ago (95% CI 137 000830 000 years ago), a younger date than suggested by available fossil data. No strong geographical structure was observed, in contrast to previously proposed subspecic partitions. However, major geographical barriers such as the Amazon river and the Darien straits between northern South America and Central America appear to have restricted historical gene ow in this species, producing measurable genetic differentiation. Jaguars could be divided into four incompletely isolated phylogeographic groups, and further sampling may reveal a ner pattern of subdivision or isolation by distance on a regional level. Operational conservation units for this species can be dened on a biome or ecosystem scale, but should take into account the historical barriers to dispersal identied here. Conservation strategies for jaguars should aim to maintain high levels of gene ow over broad geographical areas, possibly through active management of disconnected populations on a regional scale.
Keywords: conservation, evolution, microsatellites, mitochondrial DNA, Panthera onca Received 23 March 2000; revision received 16 August 2000; accepted 16 August 2000
Introduction
The jaguar (Panthera onca) is the largest Neotropical felid, measuring up to 2 m in total length and weighing up to 120 kg (Kitchener 1991). It is closely related to the other four big cats in the genus Panthera (Salles 1992; Johnson & OBrien 1997), and is the only extant representative of this genus in the Americas. It appears to have diverged from a common ancestor with the other Panthera species at least 1.5 million years ago (Ma) and entered the American continent through Beringia in the early Pleistocene (Turner & Antn 1997). Jaguar fossils have been reported in North America as far north as Nebraska and Washington
Correspondence: Warren E. Johnson. Fax: (1301) 846 6327; E-mail: [email protected] 2001 Blackwell Science Ltd
(Seymour 1989; Turner & Antn 1997), the oldest denitive specimens dating from approximately 850 000 years ago (K. Seymour, personal communication). In historical times jaguars ranged from the southern USA throughout Central and South America to the Argentinean Patagonia. Since the mid-1900s, however, they have been extirpated from broad portions of their original distribution and currently subsist in fragmented populations of variable size (Nowell & Jackson 1996). Jaguars occur in habitats ranging from dense rainforest to more open scrubland and seasonally ooded marshes, and prey mainly on large mammals such as peccary, deer, tapir, and capybara, and in some areas also on reptiles such as turtles and caiman (Oliveira 1994). Around human agricultural lands they often prey on livestock, which generates chronic conicts with ranchers and widespread
66 E . E I Z I R I K E T A L . persecution of this species in many regions. Although jaguars have been heavily hunted in the past as a trophy or for their pelts, their survival is currently threatened mostly by severe loss and fragmentation of habitat and direct persecution by ranchers (Nowell & Jackson 1996). The species as a whole is currently listed in Appendix I (endangered species) of the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), and is considered to be vulnerable by IUCN (Wozencraft 1993). Some remnant populations, however, are known to be small and isolated, and can be considered to be severely endangered (Medelln et al., in press). In order to devise adequate conservation and management strategies for an endangered species, it is important to incorporate a reliable understanding of its population structure and history, the existence of demographic partitions throughout its geographical range, and a characterization of the distribution of its genetic diversity (Avise 1989; OBrien 1994). Jaguars are currently divided into eight subspecies based on classical studies of morphology (reviewed by Seymour 1989), but a recent revision of skull characters found no signicant geographical differentiation in these traits (Larson 1997). However, there has been no comparable attempt to describe the geographical distribution of genetic diversity in jaguars, nor to use molecular markers to clarify its population structure and evolutionary history. In the present paper, we report a study of genetic variation in jaguars sampled throughout their geographical range, applying mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region sequences and microsatellite loci size variation to address issues of phylogeography and population history in this species. Results from phylogenetic and population genetic analyses of these data are used to draw inferences on past demographic processes, clarify taxonomic issues, and provide insight relevant for conservation efforts.
Table 1 Samples of Panthera onca analysed in the present study ID Pon16 Pon20 Pon21 Pon22 Pon23 Pon24 Pon25 Pon26 Pon28 Pon29 Pon30 Pon31 Pon34, 35 Pon37 Pon40*, 41, 42, 44 Pon43 Pon46 Pon47 Pon48 Pon49, 50 Pon51, 52 Pon54 Pon56*, 58 Pon59 Pon60 Pon61 Pon62, 63 Pon64 Pon65, 66 Pon67 Pon68 Pon71 Pon72 Pon73 Pon75
,
Geographic Origin Guatemala Chepo, Panama Prov., Panama Upala, Alajuela Prov., Costa Rica Puerto Limon Prov., Costa Rica Atlantico Sur Department, Nicaragua Nicaragua Rio San Juan Department, Nicaragua Guatemala Peru (Probably) Southern South America (Probably) Yucatan State, Mexico San Luis Potosi State, Mexico Mexico, unknown State Yucatan State, Mexico Mato Grosso do Sul State, SW Brazil P.N. Iguau, Paran State, S Brazil Gois State, Brazil Par State, N Brazil Brazil, unknown State Chaco, Paraguay Jalisco State, Mexico Amazonas State, Venezuela Falcon State, Venezuela Barinas State, Venezuela Bolivar State, Venezuela Venezuela, unknown State Bolivar State, Venezuela Sta. Cruz Department, Bolivia N. Bolivia Venezuela, unknown State French Guiana Brazil, unknown State Brazil, unknown State Brazil, unknown State Sinaloa State, Mexico
Institution/Contact ARCAS Summit Zoo Las Pumas Simon Bolivar Zoo Juigalpa Zoo Radio Antenna, Managua Managua Zoo Aurora Zoo Mendoza Zoo Montevideo Zoo Proyecto Balam Leon Zoo Cd.Victoria Zoo, Aragon Zoo Zoologico Centenario Proj. Carnvoros, CENAP/IBAMA Proj. Carnvoros, CENAP/IBAMA Zoolgico de Goinia Zoolgico de Goinia Zoolgico de Goinia Itaipu, Paraguay Idaho State University Las Delicias Las Delicias Asociacion Ganaderas Merida Barquisimento Valencia Castellito Zoologico de Santa Cruz Zoologico de Santa Cruz PROFAUNA Prog. Faune Sauvage/J.C. Vi Zoolgico de Paranagu/R.N.Morais CENAP/IBAMA CENAP/IBAMA Brian Miller
samples typed only for microsatellites; *, samples typed only for mtDNA. 2001 Blackwell Science Ltd, Molecular Ecology, 10, 65 79
C O N S E RVAT I O N G E N E T I C S O F J A G U A R S 67
Fig. 1 Map showing historical and current geographical distribution of jaguars (modied from Oliveira 1994), approximate sample collection sites (black circles), and the location of the Amazon river. Numbers next to circles are sample identication labels of jaguar individuals (number after Pon in Table 1) from each area. Boxes indicate individuals from the same region. Only individuals with know regional origin are shown.
The 5 portion (including the First Hypervariable Segment, HVS-I) and the central conserved portion of the mtDNA control region (the structure of the felid mtDNA control region is described elsewhere: Lopez et al. 1996; Eizirik et al. 1998; J.-H. Kim et al. unpublished) were amplied by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (Saiki et al. 1985) from genomic DNA. For the 5 segment, human primers L15997 [modied to match the domestic cat reference sequence (Lopez et al. 1996)] and H16498 (Ward et al. 1991) were used, and for the central portion primers PAN-CCR-F (CTCAACTGTCCGAAAGTGCTT ) and PANCCR-R (CCTGTGGAAGCAATAGGAATT) (J.-H. Kim et al. unpublished data) were employed. PCR reactions were performed using standard buffer conditions, 1.5 mm MgCl2, and 3336 cycles of the following steps: 94 C for 45 s, 53 C for 45 s, and 72 C for 1 min, preceded by 3 min of initial denaturing, and followed by 10 min of nal extension. PCR products were puried using centricon100 (Amicon), and cycle-sequenced from both ends, using either ABI FS Dye Primer kits (in which case PCR primers
68 E . E I Z I R I K E T A L . had been engineered to contain M13 tails) or ABI Big Dye Terminator kits; resulting fragments were analysed in an ABI 373 A automated sequencer. The 5 portion of the mtDNA control region of felids contains a rather long tandem repetitive series, which leads to size variation and heteroplasmy in several species, including jaguars (Lopez et al. 1996; Eizirik et al. 1998; J.-H. Kim et al. unpublished data). Due to the difculty in sequencing through this array, only one strand was sequenced on each ank of the repeats. Sequences were visually inspected and corrected using sequencher (Gene Codes Co.); sites or segments from which sequence could not be unambiguously scored after three attempts (independent PCR and sequencing reactions) were treated as missing information and excluded from the analysis. Similar care was taken with the central segment, although in this case both strands were available for analysis. As part of the mtDNA of cats of the Panthera genus is included in a nuclear transposition ( Johnson et al. 1996), our data were compared to reference sequences obtained from isolated mitochondrial and nuclear extracts (which exhibited several nucleotide differences; J.-H. Kim et al. unpublished data) to ascertain that the haplotypes included in this study were indeed of mitochondrial origin. Thirty-ve microsatellite loci developed originally for the domestic cat (Menotti-Raymond et al. 1999) were amplied by PCR from jaguar genomic DNA using uorescently labelled primers and the standard conditions described by Menotti-Raymond et al. (1999). The products were analysed in an ABI 310 automated sequencer. To assess amplication efciency and yield, and to establish the size range for each microsatellite in the jaguar, an initial run was performed with three individuals for each locus separately. Twenty-nine loci (FCA005, FCA008, FCA026, FCA043, FCA075, FCA077, FCA90, FCA091, FCA094, FCA096, FCA097, FCA098, FCA105, FCA126, FCA139, FCA161, FCA193, FCA201, FCA211, FCA220, FCA224, FCA229, FCA247, FCA290, FCA293, FCA310, FCA441, FCA453 and FCA678 Menotti-Raymond et al. 1999) were selected for use in this study. PCR reactions were carried out for each locus separately, and products from 3 to 5 loci were diluted and pooled together based on yield, size range and uorescent dye, and subsequently analysed in an ABI 310 or ABI 377 automated sequencer. Resulting patterns were scored and analysed using the ABI computer programs genescan 2.1 and genotyper 2.1. distribution of rate variation among sites (method of Yang & Kumar 1996) were estimated using pamp (included in the package paml 2.0 Yang 1999). Phylogenetic analyses of the identied sequences were performed using three approaches: (i) minimum evolution (ME) heuristic search as implemented in paup*4.0b2 (Swofford 1998), consisting of a distance-based (TamuraNei model with gamma correction) neighbour-joining (Saitou & Nei 1987) tree followed by branch-swapping; (ii) maximum parsimony (MP) using paup*, with a heuristic search and random addition of taxa; and (iii) maximum likelihood (ML) using paup* and puzzle 4.0 (Strimmer & Von Haeseler 1996), incorporating a gamma-corrected HKY (HasegawaKishino Yano) model with parameters estimated from the data set. Reliability of nodes dened by the phylogenetic trees was assessed using 100 bootstrap replications (Felsenstein 1985; Hillis & Bull 1993) in the ME and MP analyses, and with the quartet puzzling method in the puzzle ML analysis. Minimum-spanning networks (Excofer & Smouse 1994) were constructed using minspnet (by L. Excofer, http:/ /anthropologie.unige.ch/LGB/software/win/) to depict phylogenetic, geographical, and potential ancestor descendent relationships among the identied sequences. Measures of population genetic parameters such as gene diversity (the probability that two randomly chosen mtDNA sequences are different in the sample) and nucleotide diversity ( per nucleotide site, i.e. the probability that two randomly chosen homologous nucleotides are different in the sample) (Nei 1987) were estimated from the mtDNA data set using arlequin 1.1 (Schneider et al. 1997) and sendbs (by N. Takezaki, methods described in Nei & Jin 1989; Jin & Nei 1990; http:/ /www.bio.psu.edu/ People/Faculty/Nei/Lab/Programs.html. sendbs was applied to derive measures of nucleotide diversity () and their condence intervals (using a bootstrap approach), which were used to date the origin of extant mtDNA lineages of jaguars. Dating of the origin of jaguar mtDNA haplotypes was also performed using the linearized tree method with the program lintree (Takezaki et al. 1995), that incorporates two tests for the assumption of a molecular clock. Inference of past population expansion events was performed using mismatch distribution analyses (Rogers & Harpending 1992) as implemented in arlequin, and lineages-through-time plots (Nee et al. 1994) as implemented in end-epi (Rambaut et al. 1997). To assess the extent of differentiation among populations an Analysis of Molecular Variance (amova) (Excofer et al. 1992) was used to estimate FST values, whose statistical signicance was tested using 10 000 permutations as implemented in arlequin. We also applied the nested cladistic analysis proposed by Templeton et al. (1995) to make phylogeographic inferences with our mtDNA data set, using geodis 2.0 (Posada et al. 2000) and 10 000 permutations to test the signicance of alternative historical scenarios.
2001 Blackwell Science Ltd, Molecular Ecology, 10, 65 79
Data analysis
mtDNA control region sequences were aligned using clustalx (Thompson et al. 1997) and visually checked. Initial sequence comparisons and measures of variability were performed using mega (Kumar et al. 1993). Transition/ transversion ratios and the parameter of the gamma
C O N S E RVAT I O N G E N E T I C S O F J A G U A R S 69 Microsatellite data was analysed with microsat (Minch 1997) for general estimates of diversity and calculation of several measures of genetic distance among individuals. Resulting distance matrices were used to construct neighbour-joining phylogenetic trees with the program neighbor [included in the package phylip 3.5. (Felsenstein 1993)]. arlequin 1.1 was used to test for deviations from HardyWeinberg equilibrium (using an exact test based on the procedure described by Guo & Thompson 1992) and to derive estimates of population subdivision (using FST and RST analogs; Weir & Cockerham 1984; Slatkin 1995; Michalakis & Excofer 1996). The statistical signicance of FST and RST values was tested using 10 000 permutations as implemented in arlequin. To evaluate if there is support from microsatellite data to the inference of a population expansion in jaguars, the shape of the distribution of allele frequencies in each locus was inspected, and two statistical approaches were applied: (i) the Pk distribution method of pairwise comparisons suggested by Shriver et al. (1997); and (ii) the interlocus g-test proposed by Reich & Goldstein (1998) and Goldstein et al. (1999). The former is based on the shape of the distribution of pairwise differences in repeat number among all alleles of each locus, averaged across loci. We have performed a weighted average in which loci with the most complete data sets are proportionally more represented. The second approach ( g-test) compares the observed variance across loci of the variance in repeat scores to that expected in a population of constant size. We obtained the observed variance of the variance (Vl[Vr]) empirically, based on the output of microsat (using the total variance in repeat number per locus as Vr). The expected value under constant population size (Vg[Vr]) was derived using the method suggested by Reich & Goldstein (1998) and Goldstein et al. (1999), with the formula Vg[Vr] = 4/3 E[Vr]2 + 1/6 E[Vr], in which the average variance across loci is substituted for E[Vr]. overlapping with 100 bp of fragment B. Fragment A sequences were concatenated with the contigs generated from fragments B and C, producing a complete aligned data set of 715 bp [positions 16315 00218 in the domestic cat reference sequence (Lopez et al. 1996) ]. Sequences of the same control region segment from a lion (Panthera leo) and a leopard (P. pardus) were used as outgroups (J.-H. Kim et al. unpublished data). A 66 - bp segment of the leopard sequence on the 5 ank of the repetitive array could not be aligned with the other sequences, and was removed from the analyses. The alignment of the jaguar sequences (GenBank accession nos AF244814 AF244887) is available at http:/ /lgd.nci.nih.gov (as supplementary information linked to this paper). Sequences from the 37 jaguar individuals comprised 22 different haplotypes dened by 33 variable sites (Table 2). The estimated transition:transversion ratios varied from 1:6 to 1:16 depending on the inclusion of outgroup sequences. Among-site rate variation was high ( = 0.0023 0.3945 depending on inclusion of outgroups). Moderate to high levels of gene diversity and considerably low nucleotide diversity were observed among jaguar individuals (Table 3). Sequence identity was observed only among individuals originating from the same or adjacent geographical regions, with the exception of one haplotype which was widespread in the northern portion of the range, from Venezuela to Mexico (Pon21, 25, 31, 51, 58, 59, 60, and 75, Figs 2 and 3). Phylogenetic analyses of jaguar mtDNA sequences did not strongly support the existence of any major phylogeographic partitions (Fig. 2). The overall pattern approximated a star-phylogeny, with generally short branches and little robust structure, a pattern reminiscent of a relatively recent population expansion (Lavery et al. 1996; Avise 2000). The only phylogeographic partition which received consistent support in all analyses was the grouping of southern South American sequences (all the sequences from Brazil and Paraguay, one sequence probably from Peru, and most from Bolivia) in two monophyletic groups (Fig. 2). The rooting of the trees using other Panthera genus species as outgroups suggested that the northern South American/Central American sequences were more basal than the two southern South American clusters. The minimum-spanning network (Fig. 3) of the jaguar mtDNA sequences provided additional support for the two southern South American clusters, and for their independent connection to a more basal northern sequence. This diagram is also indicative of a relatively recent population expansion in the group of northern sequences, in which several localized lineages are connected by short branches to the most common, potentially ancestral, widespread haplotype. With the exception of the basal Pon37, all Mexican individuals either carried the widespread Pon21 haplotype or a sequence which had been recently derived (being one step away) from it.
70 E . E I Z I R I K E T A L .
Table 2 Mitochondrial DNA control region haplotypes identied for jaguars (Panthera onca) in this study. Nucleotide positions showing variation among jaguar haplotypes are depicted; numbers (vertical) refer to the aligned site in our 715 bp data set [which corresponds to positions 16315 00218 in the domestic cat reference sequence (Lopez et al. 1996)]. Nucleotides present at these sites in the outgroups (Panthera leo and P. pardus) are shown in the bottom. The geographical origin of jaguar individuals bearing each haplotype is also indicated Nucleotide positions 111112 2356335783 4231497368 ATTTAGCTCA .......C.. .......... .......... .......... .....A.... .....A...T ........T. .......... .CC?....T. .......... G...G.T.T. G...G.T.T. G..CG.T... G...G.T.T. ....G...T. ....G..... ....G..... ....G..... ...?...... ....G..... ?...G..... .CC...T... G.C.----.. 2222222334 4445689280 1582601077 AAACTCTGTA .......... .......... .....?.... .........G ........C. G?TG?...C. .......... .......A.. .....TC... .......... .G........ .G........ .G.?C..... .G........ .......A.. .......A.. .......A.. .......... .......... .......A.. .......A.. ....C-CA.. .......... 4444445666 0135783137 9182658185 TATATGGTGA .......... .......... ?G...A..A. .....A..A. ........A. ........A. .......... .........G ...G....A. .........G C?...A..A. .....A..A. ...G....A. ...G....A. ??...A..A. ...GC.A..G ..CGC.A..G ...GC.A..G .......C.. .G.GC.A..G ...G?.A..G ...G.A.... .G.G.A.CA. 677 801 300 TAT ... .G. ... ... ... ... C.. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .G. ... .GC ... .G. ... ... ...
Individuals Pon21, 25, 31, 51, 58, 59, 60, 75 Pon16, 26, 30 Pon52 Pon37 Pon20 Pon22, 24 Pon23 Pon56 Pon61 Pon63 Pon68 Pon29, 41, 42, 44 Pon40, 46 Pon71 Pon73 Pon72 Pon28, 47 Pon43 Pon64 Pon65 Pon66 Pon49 Ple181 Ppa21
Geographic origin V, CR, Nic, Mex Guat, Mexico Mexico Mexico Panama CR, Nic Nicaragua Venezuela Venezuela Venezuela Fr. Guiana Brazil Brazil Brazil Brazil Brazil Peru (P), Bra Brazil Bolivia Bolivia Bolivia Paraguay
Abbreviations: V, Venezuela; CR, Costa Rica; Nic, Nicaragua; Mex, Mexico; Guat, Guatemala; Fr. Guiana, French Guiana, Bra, Brazil; (P), Probable origin.
Table 3 Measures of mitochondrial DNA diversity observed in the two major phylogeographic groups of Panthera onca identied in this study, Southern and Northern (see text for denition), as well as separate estimates for Central America (C.A.) and Northern South America (N.S.A.), which are included in the Northern group. Estimates for the two separate subgroups in Central America (fourpopulation scenario) are not provided due the small sample size available for each of them No. of haplotypes 22 11 11 7 5 No. of bp differences 115 113 112 18 19 % Pairwise divergence* 0.142.35 0.141.94 0.141.87 0.141.25 0.141.29 Nucleotide diversity ()* 0.00771 0.00010 0.00815 0.00000 0.00448 0.00015 0.00411 0.00024 0.00475 0.00000
Gene diversity 0.9399 0.0262 0.9333 0.0477 0.8476 0.0697 0.8462 0.0742 0.8571 0.1371
*Estimated using Kimura 2-parameter distances (Kimura 1980). Sites with any missing information were completely excluded.
C O N S E RVAT I O N G E N E T I C S O F J A G U A R S 71
Fig. 2 Phylogenetic relationships among the jaguar mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences identied in this study, based on 715 bp of the mtDNA control region. Labels are individual identication numbers. The two southern clades are identied by brackets. (A) Maximum parsimony tree constructed with paup* using a heuristic search with 10 replicates of random taxon addition and the accelerated transformation option for character-state optimization; shown is the strict consensus of eight trees (length = 122, CI = 0.818). Values above selected branches indicate number of steps/number of homoplasies; values below branches represent support from 100 bootstrap replications (heuristic searches with random taxon-addition, constrained to generate a maximum of 1000 trees); black circles indicate other branches with bootstrap support 50%. Asterisks below branches indicate support from 1000 quartet puzzling steps in the maximum likelihood analysis with puzzle (* = support for branch >50%; ** = support for branch >80%). (B) Minimum evolution tree, constructed with paup* using TamuraNei distances corrected for the gamma distribution of rate variation among sites ( = 0.39) and the neighbour-joining algorithm followed by a branch-swapping procedure. Values above selected branches indicate branch lengths as percentages; values below branches represent support from 100 bootstrap replications (heuristic searches constrained to a maximum of 500 trees); black circles indicate other branches with bootstrap support 50%.
The mismatch distribution of jaguar mtDNA haplotypes (Fig. 4A) was approximately unimodal and wave-like, which is compatible with a population bottleneck and/or expansion in the recent past (Rogers & Harpending 1992). The lineages-through-time plots (Fig. 4B) produced a clearly convex-shaped curve, particularly when restricted to the earliest haplotype coalescence events, which seems to be also consistent with an initial period of exponential population growth (Nee et al. 1994). The measures of nucleotide diversity () and divergence (dxy) (Nei 1987) were used to estimate a coalescence date for jaguar mtDNA sequences (derived as the average pairwise coalescent time of the sampled jaguar haplotypes) and its 95% condence interval (CI: 2 SE). For this analysis, all sites which contained gaps or missing information in any haplotype, including outgroups, were excluded, and all estimates were derived from the
2001 Blackwell Science Ltd, Molecular Ecology, 10, 6579
remaining 556 nucleotides. This minimized the effects of saturation in interspecic comparisons as some of the most variable sites were excluded. To estimate the substitution rate of this mtDNA segment, the average distance (dxy) between the jaguar sequences and the outgroups (lion and leopard) was computed (dxy = 0.07499 0.002839), based on a Kimura 2-parameter model of nucleotide substitution, corrected with a gamma distribution of rate variation among sites, with an (shape) parameter derived specically for this data set ( = 0.13). The standard equation dxy = 2T (where is the substitution rate and T is time; Nei 1987) and a conservative fossil record calibration (3 Ma) (Turner & Antn 1997) for the separation of jaguars from lions/leopards produced a substitution rate of 0.012498 per site per million years (Myr), or approximately 1.2%/Myr. Applying the same equation and this substitution rate to the overall
72 E . E I Z I R I K E T A L .
Fig. 3 Minimum-spanning network depicting phylogenetic and geographical relationships among jaguar mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotypes (circles) based on sequences of 715 bp of the control region. The area of the circle is roughly proportional to the haplotype frequency, and the length of connecting lines is roughly proportional to the corrected distance (TamuraNei gamma, = 0.39) between haplotypes. Use of the raw number of nucleotide differences among haplotypes produced a concordant result. Labels inside each circle indicate individual jaguars bearing each haplotype. Dark grey circles (with no upper horizontal line) are haplotypes occurring only in Mexico and Guatemala; dark grey circles with an upper horizontal line occurred only in southern Central America (see text for denition); light grey circles are those found in northern South America (Venezuela and French Guiana); the large graded grey circle is a widespread haplotype found from Mexico to Venezuela; white dotted circles are haplotypes found only in southern South America (Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay and potentially Peru). Bars placed on connecting lines indicate the exact number of nucleotide differences between haplotypes. White circles bordered by heavy lines are outgroups; the number of nucleotide differences in their connecting lines (not drawn to scale) is indicated in brackets. Polygons demarcate selected clades for which signicant results were observed in the nested cladistic analyses (no outgroup was used in this approach). The dotted line internal polygon indicates a geographically restricted 3-step clade that showed a signicantly small (P < 0.001) within-clade distance, and a signicantly large (P = 0.0001) nested-clade distance (see Templeton 1998 for denition of statistics). The solid line polygon demarcates a 4-step clade that showed a signicant value ( P < 0.0001) for nonrandom geographical distribution of subclades in the exact contingency test implemented in geodis, and a signicantly large (P < 0.0001) interior tip distance. This 4-step clade also showed signicantly small within-clade and nested-clade distances (P < 0.05) when compared to the whole network.
jaguar nucleotide diversity in this segment ( = 0.00699 0.000733) produced an estimated age of 279 645 years (95% CI = 220 990 338 290 years) for the coalescence of jaguar mtDNA haplotypes. If the 95% CI of dxy is also considered when estimating the substitution rate (Bonatto & Salzano 1997), an upper bound of 366 000 years ago is obtained. Using the 95% CI for both and the substitution rate, and a more recent calibration date for the separation of jaguars from lions/leopards (2 Myr), provided an overall lower bound of 136 956 years ago for the coalescence of jaguar mtDNA sequences. The molecular clock tests
implemented in lintree showed that the set of jaguar sequences used for the analysis above did not depart signicantly from rate constancy (P > 0.05), but indicated that three haplotypes exhibited a marginally signicant reduction in rate. Removal of haplotypes that failed either of the rate-constancy tests in separate analyses with each of the two outgroups produced a range of estimates of 407 905510 401 years ago for the basal divergence of jaguar mtDNA lineages (applying the substitution rate derived above with the 3 Myr calibration). The 95% CI of these estimates ranged from 165 627 to 830 293 years ago.
2001 Blackwell Science Ltd, Molecular Ecology, 10, 65 79
C O N S E RVAT I O N G E N E T I C S O F J A G U A R S 73
Table 4 Measures of geographical population differentiation in Panthera onca, based on an Analysis of Molecular Variance approach with mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and microsatellite data mtDNA FST 0.342** 0.295** 0.261* 0.354** 0.079 0.300** 0.261* 0.333* 0.358** 0.185* 0.082 0.257* Microsatellites FST 0.045** 0.065** 0.020* 0.083** 0.077** 0.063** 0.020* 0.085** 0.084** 0.075* 0.083** 0.025
Subdivision 2 populations 3 populations S. vs. N.S.A. S. vs. C.A. N.S.A. vs. C.A. 4 populations S. vs. N.S.A. S. vs. S.C.A. S. vs. M + G N.S.A. vs. S.C.A. N.S.A. vs. M + G S.C.A. vs. M + G
RST 0.154** 0.171** 0.067* 0.237** 0.140** 0.183** 0.067* 0.223** 0.266** 0.131* 0.185** 0.140*
Fig. 4 (A) Mismatch distribution analysis of jaguar mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region sequences. (B) Lineages-through-time plot based on a phylogeny of jaguar mtDNA haplotypes constructed from Kimura 2-parameter distances. The number of lineages is shown as a semi-logarithmic transform.
*signicant (P < 0.05); **signicant (P < 0.001). Population subdivision scenarios are described in the text; the two-population scheme depicts south (S) vs. north (N) comparisons; the three-population scheme retains the southern group (S), and divides the northern group into northern South America (N.S.A.) and Central America (C.A.); the fourpopulation scheme further divides C.A. into separate S.C.A. (southern Central America: Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua) and M + G (Mexico + Guatemala). Calculated using Tamura-Nei distances (Tamura & Nei 1993). Calculated with the FST option (number of different alleles) in arlequin. Calculated with the RST option (sum of squared size difference) in arlequin (Michalakis & Excofer 1996).
To investigate the extent of population differentiation in jaguars based on mtDNA haplotypes, we compared different scenarios of geographical subdivision. In the rst one, individuals were divided into two broad geographical groups, which had been suggested by the topology of the mtDNA phylogeny. One group encompassed the northern part of the jaguar distribution (Northern group: Mexico, Central America, Venezuela and French Guiana), and the other contained the southern part (Southern group: Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay, and two samples probably from Peru and southern South America, respectively). This subdivision scheme implied that the Southern group contained all sequences present in the two independent southern clades (Figs 2 and 3), as well as the haplotype Pon65. In the second hypothesized scenario of geographical subdivision, we divided jaguar haplotypes into three groups. The Southern group was maintained, but the Northern group was
2001 Blackwell Science Ltd, Molecular Ecology, 10, 6579
separated into Central America (including Mexico) and northern South America, aiming to test the signicance of the Darien straits in Panama as a historical barrier to gene ow in this species. Finally, a third scenario was tested in which Central America was subdivided into two separate groups (Mexico + Guatemala; Nicaragua + Costa Rica + Panama), producing a total of four groups. This pattern of geographical subdivision in Central America has been observed in a previous study of Neotropical felids (Eizirik et al. 1998). Other possible scenarios of population subdivision were considered, but could not be thoroughly assessed at the present time due to limitations in sample size for particular areas and lack of precision in the geographical origin of most individuals. Using the two-group scheme, the estimated FST value was 0.342 (P < 0.0001) (Table 4). Using the three- and four-group scenarios, the FST estimates decreased to 0.295 and 0.300, respectively (P < 0.0001 for both). Pairwise FST estimates between the southern group (south of the Amazon River) and all northern groups remained signicant, but the FST between northern South America and part of Central America was not (P > 0.05) (see Table 4). This is likely due
74 E . E I Z I R I K E T A L .
Table 5 Measures of diversity at 29 microsatellite loci in the two major phylogeographic groups of Panthera onca identied in this study, Southern and Northern (see text for denition), as well as separate estimates for Central America (C.A.) and Northern South America (N.S.A.), which are included in the Northern group. Estimates for the two separate subgroups in Central America (four-population scenario) are not provided due the small sample size available for each of them Average heterozygosity 0.739 0.724 0.695 0.622 0.690 Average No. of alleles 8.310 6.655 6.828 5.172 5.138 Average variance 6.946 6.520 6.352 6.118 6.514 Average allele size range 9.862 8.034 8.690 7.310 6.931 No. of private alleles
43 48 22 12
to the predominance in Mexico and Guatemala of the widespread Pon21 haplotype and others closely related to it. These mtDNA results support the recognition of two main phylogeographic groups of jaguars, Southern and Northern (probably separated by the Amazon River), but also suggest a pattern of regional subdivision in the northern part of the range. FST estimates based on gammacorrected distances with extremely low values of (not shown) also supported a southnorth division of jaguar haplotypes. The nested cladistic analysis proposed by Templeton et al. (1995) was performed on the basis of the haplotype tree shown in Fig. 3, and considering four broad geographical areas (four-population scenario described above) as operational units. Signicant association of clades and geography was observed only at the 3-step and 4-step levels of the nested analysis. In one of the two 4-step clades (demarcated within a solid-line polygon in Fig. 3) the exact contingency test signicantly rejected (P < 0.0001) the null hypothesis of no geographical association. In this clade, signicantly small (P < 0.05) within-clade distances (Dc) were detected for all nested tip 3-step subclades, and a signicantly large (P < 0.0001) interior tip Dc was also observed. One of these nested 3-step subclades (shown as a dotted-line polygon in Fig. 3) exhibited a signicant reversal of small within-clade distance vs. large nestedclade distances (Dn), which led to the inference of longdistance colonization (from north to south) as the cause for the observed pattern (see Templeton 1998 for a review on the interpretation of this analysis). When the whole tree was examined (a dichotomous comparison of the indicated 4-step clade vs. the remaining jaguar haplotypes), the null hypothesis was again rejected (P < 0.05) in the exact contingency test, signicantly small (P < 0.05) Dc and Dn were detected for the demarcated clade, and a signicantly large Dn was detected for the second major clade. These results suggest a historical scenario of restricted gene ow with isolation by distance over broad geographical areas.
Microsatellite variation
Allele size variation at 29 microsatellite loci was recorded for 42 jaguars (Table 1), as well as for two lions and two leopards to be used as outgroups. Twenty-seven of these loci were dinucleotide repeats, and two (FCA441 and FCA453) were tetranucleotide repeats (Menotti-Raymond et al. 1999). One of the dinucleotide loci (FCA293) was monomorphic in our jaguar sample. The genotypes used in the present analyses are available at http:/ / lgd.nci.nih.gov (as supplementary information linked to this paper). All loci, except FCA098, have been mapped in the domestic cat (Menotti-Raymond et al. 1999). Twentyfour were at least 15 cm apart implying independent allele assortment; two pairs of loci [FCA075, FCA096] and [FCA161, FCA224] were linked at distances of 9.0 cm and 4.0 cm, respectively. Deviations from HardyWeinberg (HW) equilibrium in the microsatellite loci were tested separately for three geographical populations: southern South America, northern South America, and Central America (see below). Five loci were out of HW equilibrium in the former, six in the second population, and nine in the latter ( = 0.05). After applying the sequential Bonferroni correction (Rice 1989), only one locus in the southern group and another in Central America remained signicantly out of HW equilibrium. Comparative analyses excluding the 14 loci that were out of equilibrium in any population (uncorrected assessment) indicated no signicant change in the results relative to our complete data set, other than slight reductions in estimates of genetic diversity and geographical differentiation. We have, therefore, used our complete data set of 29 loci throughout the analyses presented here, except where otherwise stated. Overall levels of genetic diversity were moderate to high, with an average expected heterozygosity of 0.739 (Table 5). The phylogenetic analysis of microsatellite variation across individuals showed no evidence of strong geographical structure, nor provided reliable support for any major partition, but suggested a clustering of individuals from
2001 Blackwell Science Ltd, Molecular Ecology, 10, 65 79
C O N S E RVAT I O N G E N E T I C S O F J A G U A R S 75
Fig. 6 Pk distribution of differences in repeat number among alleles at a microsatellite locus, averaged in a weighted fashion across 26 dinucleotide loci in our complete Panthera onca data set.
Fig. 5 Phylogenetic relationships among jaguar individuals based on variation at 29 microsatellite loci. The tree was constructed using the Neighbour-Joining algorithm based on the Proportion of Shared Alleles distance measure (Bowcock et al. 1994), using the option (1-ps) in microsat. Values above branches are percent support in 100 bootstrap replications (only values above 50% are shown). The geographical origin of individuals is indicated next to each sample label.
nearby regions (Fig. 5). Phylogenetic trees generated using different distance measures (Dps, Dkf Bowcock et al. 1994) led to very similar conclusions. The shape of the distribution of allele sizes varied across microsatellite loci. Of the 28 variable loci, 13 had clearly unimodal distributions, which according to Reich & Goldstein (1998) can be expected for populations that underwent a demographic expansion in the past. Five other loci had a distribution that was approximately unimodal, while 10 loci clearly departed from this pattern. The two statistical approaches to estimate demographic history with microsatellite data were performed for the jaguar sample as a whole, using only the 26 polymorphic dinucleotide loci, and provided results that are also compatible with a population expansion. The Pk method of Shriver et al. (1997) produced an average distribution of pairwise differences in repeat number which showed the highest point at a plateau between values 0 and 1 (Fig. 6). The g-test of Reich & Goldstein (1998) produced a value of 0.592 for
2001 Blackwell Science Ltd, Molecular Ecology, 10, 6579
the ratio Vl[Vr]/Vg[Vr]. Inclusion of only 24 unlinked loci in the analysis produced a similar result. As with the mtDNA data, the statistical analysis of population differentiation was performed for different hypothesized geographical partitions. Measures of differentiation (FST and RST analogs) were signicant (P < 0.05) in all comparisons except for the subdivision of Central America into two separate groups (four-population scenario) in the FST estimate (Table 4). RST estimates, which correct for allele size variation, indicated higher levels of differentiation than FST estimates, which only consider the number of different alleles. However, both of these methods produced higher overall levels of differentiation with three geographical groups compared with two, and the RST estimate was maximized when four separate groups were hypothesized (see Table 4). These microsatellite results support the recognition of at least three or four incompletely isolated phylogeographic groups in jaguars, but may also reect, at least in part, a pattern of isolation by distance over most of the species range. Measures of microsatellite diversity were similar in different geographical regions (Table 5).
76 E . E I Z I R I K E T A L . et al. 1998; this study). By contrast, the microsatellite variation observed in jaguars is comparable to, or higher than, that of other felid species analysed so far, including the domestic cat, for which these markers were originally designed (Driscoll 1998; Johnson et al. 1999; MenottiRaymond et al. 1999; Culver et al. 2000). Taken together, these results suggest a younger age for jaguars as a species compared to other Neotropical felids, particularly ocelots and margays (Eizirik et al. 1998; Johnson et al. 1998, 1999). The pattern observed in the jaguar intraspecic mtDNA phylogeny is consistent with a fairly recent population expansion, with little divergence among haplotypes (Table 3, Fig. 2) and insufcient time and/or isolation to generate regional differentiation. A similar inference can be made from the microsatellite phylogeny (Fig. 5). More individual variation is observed, but there is still no strong support for major geographical structure, suggesting a recent origin and high levels of gene ow in this species. The inference of a population expansion in the relatively recent past is supported by the mtDNA mismatch distribution analysis and the lineages-through-time-plot (Fig. 4). The mismatch distribution has a prominent major peak suggestive of a population expansion event (Rogers & Harpending 1992). However, the curve is not perfectly smooth, which could be due to our small sample size or to a more complex population history (e.g. subdivision) after the inferred demographic growth. The convex shape of the lineagesthrough-time plot is also consistent with exponential population growth (Nee et al. 1994). But it also portrays a more recent period when this pattern is less visible, indicating that the demographic expansion may have been restricted to an earlier phase. The microsatellite allele frequency distributions are also concordant with the inference of an expansion due to the fact that more than half of the variable loci show a unimodal or approximately unimodal pattern. The absence of such indications in 10 of the loci may reect our small sample size or alternatively derive from demographic processes occurring after the hypothesized expansion. One of the 10 loci (FCA026) has a bimodal distribution that can be largely explained by dividing the jaguar sample in north south geographical groups (not shown). The Pk distribution of our jaguar microsatellite data set is similar to the simulation results of Shriver et al. (1997) of either a population at equilibrium with an effective population size (Ne ) around 1000, or a population resulting from a 1000-fold expansion 500 generations ago. Although no strict comparisons should be attempted, it is almost certain that the Ne of jaguars as a species was, until very recently, much larger than 1000. Therefore, this Pk pattern is suggestive of a population which has still not reached equilibrium after an expansion event. The interlocus g-test result of less than one is also suggestive of population growth (Goldstein et al. 1999), although it seems to fall short of signicance based on the critical value suggested by Reich & Goldstein (1998) for a similar data set. The estimated coalescence date of jaguar mtDNA haplotypes puts a lower bound on the origin of extant lineages around 137 000 years ago, which indicates that the inferred population expansion happened around or before this time. This estimation suggested an origin 280 000510 000 years ago, with an overall upper bound of 830 000 years ago, still slightly younger than the conrmed fossil record of jaguars in north America (over 850 000 years old; Seymour 1989). The phylogenetic relationships of jaguar mtDNA sequences (particularly Fig. 3) suggest that most extant lineages arose in northern South America, and that the colonization of Central America and Mexico was largely a subsequent process. This suggests that the postulated extinction of jaguars from most of North America towards the end of the Pleistocene left little residual genetic diversity, and that subsequent re-colonization occurred by immigration of South American founders. The occurrence of two independent clades of jaguar mtDNA sequences occurring south of the Amazon River does not seem to indicate geographically segregated clusters, at least with the samples currently available. Rather, these clades seem to result from a recent colonization process of southern South America in which at least two unrelated founder haplotypes were present. This view is supported by the observation that these two clades have similar estimates of nucleotide diversity (not shown), and therefore can be interpreted as being of a similar age.
Population structure
Analyses of the genetic structure of jaguar populations showed no evidence of major geographical partitions, old subdivision events, or complete barriers to historical gene ow. This is consistent with the ndings of Larson (1997), that were based on skull morphology, and in contrast with the traditional division of jaguar subspecies (reviewed by Seymour 1989). We could recognize up to four incompletely isolated phylogeographic partitions: Mexico + Guatemala, southern Central America, northern South America (north of the Amazon river), and southern South America (south of the river). These geographical groups are rather recent, however, and none demonstrated complete reciprocal monophyly in relation to the others (Figs 2, 3 and 5). Furthermore, the mtDNA data did not support the separation of Central America from northern South America, because the FST value derived from this marker was maximized when only two major phylogeographic groups (Southern and Northern) were considered (Table 4). On the other hand, the microsatellite data indicated higher levels of differentiation between Central America and northern South America than between northern and southern South America. In most cases, estimated levels of
2001 Blackwell Science Ltd, Molecular Ecology, 10, 65 79
C O N S E RVAT I O N G E N E T I C S O F J A G U A R S 77 population differentiation were lower with the microsatellite data than with mtDNA (Table 4), which could be due to differences in the effective population size assessed by these two types of markers, and/or in the patterns of dispersal by male and female jaguars. Estimates of the number of migrants per generation (Nm) derived from mtDNA FST and microsatellite FST and RST values were high (around or above 1), but cannot be interpreted as a direct measure of current gene ow because they are also likely to be inuenced by the recent common origin that these populations share. The observed patterns can be interpreted as being caused by a combination of several demographic phenomena, starting with the recent expansion of the species as a whole, preventing sufcient time for extensive genetic differentiation. In addition, jaguars are able to disperse efciently over broad areas and diverse habitats (Oliveira 1994), which is consistent with our inference of high levels of gene ow on wide geographical scales. The Amazon river may represent a historical barrier to gene ow predominantly in females, producing the only visible structure in the mtDNA phylogenies. However, the Amazon appears to have been less of an impediment for male dispersal, as inferred from our microsatellite data (Table 4, Fig. 5). This is in agreement with known aspects of the dispersal biology of felids in general, which indicate that females are largely philopatric and males are more likely to disperse longer distances (Kitchener 1991; Oliveira 1994). Our data also provide evidence for more recent barriers to gene ow between northern South America and southern Central America, and between Nicaragua and Guatemala, producing a measurable impact on the frequencies of microsatellite alleles and mtDNA haplotypes. Similar phylogeographic partitions that are likely caused by the same historical barriers have been observed for other Neotropical cat species, such as the puma (Culver et al. 2000), ocelot and margay (Eizirik et al. 1998). In addition to the inferred impact of localized historical barriers to gene ow, an overall pattern of isolation by distance over broad regions may also account for the observed patterns, and should be further investigated with additional sampling and rened geographical coverage. regions, and the inference of historically high levels of gene ow over broad areas argue for a revision of the traditionally held view of jaguar subspecies, which are usually the basis for conservation and management plans. Our data provide no support for the existence of major geographical partitions dening old, extensively isolated groups which could be viewed as subspecies or Evolutionary Signicant Units (Ryder 1986; Moritz 1994). The only evidence for statistically signicant geographical differentiation seems to support reduced levels of gene ow across barriers such as the Amazon river and the Darien Straits, and isolation by distance on a broad scale. Although the isolation generated by these localized barriers does not seem to be complete, management options which increase migration across them (e.g. eld translocations or captive breeding of Amazonian individuals from the two sides of the river) should be avoided or minimized to approximate natural historical processes. Our results are compatible with currently favoured strategies for jaguar conservation on a broad regional basis (Medelln et al., in press), having largescale biomes or ecosystems as operational management units. This strategy is advisable both in terms of maintaining jaguars as an important component of functional ecosystems and as a agship species for overall regional conservation. This management approach is also appropriate considering the possibility of local adaptation to different habitats, which would probably not be detected by our molecular markers (Lynch 1996), particularly given the number of samples analysed. Finally, because of continued reduction, fragmentation and isolation of remaining jaguar populations, it is important to consider the inference presented here for high historical levels of gene ow over broad areas. Our results support management alternatives that permit the maintenance of this original and likely adaptive population dynamics, possibly including active intervention to mediate gene ow among isolated remnant populations.
Acknowledgements
We would like to express our thanks to all the people and Institutions that helped collect samples of biological material from jaguars, including those mentioned in Table 1, as well as C.B. Indrusiak, J.K. F. Mhler Jr., D.A. Sana, R.G. Morato, R. Gasparini-Morato, Companhia Energtica de So Paulo (CESP) and Associao Pr-Carnvoros. We would like to thank L.R.P. Utz, S.L. Bonatto, N. Takezaki, C.B. Indrusiak, D.A. Sana, L. Cullen, R.J. Sarno, C.A. Driscoll, O. Uphyrkina, G. Bar-Gal, V.A. David, S. Cevario and A. Snyder for support, helpful information, discussions, suggestions and technical assistance. We also thank three anonymous reviewers for helpful suggestions and comments on a previous version of this paper. The American Association of Zoological Parks and Aquariums (AZA) and the Purina Conservation Endowment Fund (CEF) provided nancial support for this research. E. Eizirik is supported by a fellowship from CNPq, Brazil. Samples of biological material were collected with the appropriate permits, and
78 E . E I Z I R I K E T A L .
imported with a permit issued to the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health (principal ofcer S.J. OBrien). Johnson WE, Pecon-Slattery J, Eizirik E et al. (1999) Disparate phylogeographic patterns of mitochondrial DNA variation in four closely related South American small cat species. Molecular Ecology, 8, S79S94. Kimura M (1980) A simple method for estimating evolutionary rate of base substitution through comparative studies of nucleotide sequences. Journal of Molecular Evolution, 16, 111120. Kitchener A (1991) The Natural History of the Wild Cats. Comstock/ Cornell, Ithaca. Kumar S, Tamura K, Nei M (1993) MEGA, Version 1.1. The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA. Larson SE (1997) Taxonomic re-evaluation of the jaguar. Zoo Biology, 16, 107120. Lavery S, Moritz C, Fielder DR (1996) Genetic patterns suggest exponential population growth in a declining species. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 13, 11061113. Lopez JV, Cevario S, OBrien SJ (1996) Complete nucleotide sequences of the domestic cat (Felis catus) mitochondrial genome and a transposed mtDNA tandem repeat (Numt) in the nuclear genome. Genomics, 33, 229246. Lynch M (1996) A quantitative-genetic perspective in conservation issues. In: Conservation Genetics: Case Histories from Nature (eds Avise JC, Hamrick JL), pp. 471501. Chapman & Hall, New York. Medelln RA, Chetkiewicz C, Rabinowitz A et al. (eds) (2001) Jaguars in the new millennium: A status assessment, priority detection, and recommendations for the conservation of jaguars in the Americas. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico/Wildlife Conservation Society, Mexico D. F (in press). Menotti-Raymond M, David VA, Lyons LA et al. (1999) A genetic linkage map of microsatellites in the domestic cat (Felis catus). Genomics, 57, 923. Michalakis Y, Excofer L (1996) A generic estimation of population subdivision using distances between alleles with special reference to microsatellite loci. Genetics, 142, 10611064. / Minch E (1997) MICROSAT 1.5d. Stanford University, http:/ lotka.stanford.edu/microsat.html. Montgomery GW, Sise JA (1990) Extraction of DNA from sheep white blood cells. New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 33, 437441. Moritz C (1994) Dening Evolutionarily Signicant Units for conservation. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 9, 373 375. Nee S, May RM, Harvey PH (1994) The reconstructed evolutionary process. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society (London) B, 344, 305311. Nei M (1987) Molecular Evolutionary Genetics. Columbia University Press, New York. Nei M, Jin L (1989) Variances of the average numbers of nucleotide substitutions within and between populations. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 6, 290300. Nowell K, Jackson P (1996) Wild Cats: status survey and conservation action plan. IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group, Gland, Switzerland. OBrien SJ (1994) A role for molecular genetics in biological conservation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 91, 57485755. Oliveira TG (1994) Neotropical cats: ecology and conservation. EDUFMA, So Lus, Brazil. Pbo S, Gifford JA, Wilson AC (1988) Mitochondrial DNA sequences from a 7000-year-old brain. Nucleic Acids Research, 16, 12451255. Posada D, Crandall KA, Templeton AR (2000) GeoDis: a program for the cladistic nested analysis of the geographical distribution of genetic haplotypes. Molecular Ecology, 9, 487 488. 2001 Blackwell Science Ltd, Molecular Ecology, 10, 65 79
References
Avise JC (1989) Role of molecular genetics in recognition and conservation of endangered species. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 4, 279 281. Avise JC (2000) Phylogeography: the History and Formation of Species. Harvard University Press, Cambridge. Bonatto SL, Salzano FM (1997) A single and early migration for the peopling of the Americas supported by mitochondrial DNA sequence data. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 94, 1866 1871. Boom R, Sol CJA, Salimans MMM et al. (1990) Rapid and simple method for purication of nucleic acids. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 28, 495 503. Bowcock AM, Ruiz-Linares A, Tomfohrde J et al. (1994) High resolution of human evolutionary trees with polymorphic microsatellites. Nature, 368, 455 457. Culver M, Johnson WE, Pecon-Slattery J, OBrien SJ (2000) Genomic ancestry of the American puma (Puma concolor). Journal of Heredity, 91, 186 197. Driscoll CA (1998) A characterization of microsatellite loci variation in Panthera leo, Acinonyx jubatus and Felis concolor. MSc Thesis. Hood College, Frederick, MD, USA. Eizirik E, Bonatto SL, Johnson WE et al. (1998) Phylogeographic patterns and mitochondrial DNA control region evolution in two Neotropical cats (Mammalia, Felidae). Journal of Molecular Evolution, 47, 613 624. Excofer L, Smouse PE (1994) Using allele frequencies and geographic subdivision to reconstruct gene trees within a species: molecular variance parsimony. Genetics, 136, 343359. Excofer L, Smouse P, Quattro J (1992) Analysis of molecular variance inferred from metric distances among DNA haplotypes: application to human mitochondrial DNA restriction data. Genetics, 131, 479 491. Felsenstein J (1985) Condence limits on phylogenies: an approach using the bootstrap. Evolution, 39, 783791. Felsenstein J (1993) PHYLIP 3.5. Washington University, Seattle. Goldstein DB, Roemer GW, Smith DA et al. (1999) The use of microsatellite variation to infer population structure and demographic history in a natural model system. Genetics, 151, 797801. Guo S, Thompson E (1992) Performing the exact test of Hardy Weinberg proportion for multiple alleles. Biometrics, 48, 361372. Hillis DM, Bull JJ (1993) An empirical test of bootstrapping as a method for assessing condence in phylogenetic analysis. Systematic Biology, 42, 182 192. Jin L, Nei M (1990) Limitations of the evolutionary parsimony method of phylogenetic analysis. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 7, 82 102 (Published erratum appears in Molecular Biology and Evolution, 7, 201). Johnson WE, Culver M, Iriarte A et al. (1998) Tracking the evolution of the elusive Andean Mountain Cat (Oreailurus jacobita) from mitochondrial DNA. Journal of Heredity, 89, 227232. Johnson WE, Dratch PA, Martenson JS, OBrien SJ (1996) Resolution of recent radiations within three evolutionary lineages of Felidae using mitochondrial restriction fragment length polymorphism variation. Journal of Mammalian Evolution, 3, 97120. Johnson WE, OBrien SJ (1997) Phylogenetic reconstruction of the Felidae using 16S rRNA and NADH-5 mitochondrial genes. Journal of Molecular Evolution, 44 (Suppl. 1), S98S116.
C O N S E RVAT I O N G E N E T I C S O F J A G U A R S 79
Rambaut A, Harvey PH, Nee S (1997) End-Epi: An application for inferring phylogenetic and population dynamical processes from molecular sequences. Computer Applications in the Biosciences, 13, 303 306. Reich DE, Goldstein DB (1998) Genetic evidence for a Paleolithic human population exansion in Africa. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 95, 81198123. Rice WR (1989) Analyzing tables of statistical tests. Evolution, 43, 223 225. Rogers AR, Harpending H (1992) Population growth makes waves in the distribution of pairwise genetic differences. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 9, 552 569. Ryder OA (1986) Species conservation and systematics: the dilemma of subspecies. Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 1, 910. Saiki RK, Scharf S, Faloona F et al. (1985) Enzymatic amplication of beta-globin genomic sequences and restriction site analysis for diagnosis of sickle cell anemia. Science, 230, 13501354. Saitou N, Nei M (1987) The neighbor-joining method: a new method for reconstructing phylogenetic trees. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 4, 406 425. Salles LO (1992) Felid phylogenetics: extant taxa and skull morphology (Felidae, Aeluroidea). American Museum Novitates, 3047, 1 67. Sambrook J, Fritsch EF, Maniatis T (1989) Molecular Cloning: a Laboratory Manual. 2nd edn. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, New York. Schneider S, Kueffer JM, Roessli D, Excofer L (1997) ARLEQUIN, Version 1.1. University of Geneva, Switzerland. (http:/ /lgb.unige.ch/ arlequin). Seymour KL (1989) Panthera onca. Mammalian Species, 340, 19. Shriver MD, Jin L, Ferrel RE, Deka R (1997) Microsatellite data support an early population expansion in Africa. Genome Research, 7, 586 591. Slatkin M (1995) A measure of population subdivision based on microsatellite allele frequencies. Genetics, 139, 457462. Strimmer K, Von Haeseler A (1996) Quartet puzzling: a quartet maximum likelihood method for reconstructing tree topologies. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 13, 964969. Swofford DL (1998) PAUP* Phylogenetic Analysis Using Parsimony and Other Methods, Computer Program. Sinauer, Sunderland, MA. Takezaki N, Rzhetsky A, Nei M (1995) Phylogenetic test of the molecular clock and linearized trees. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 12, 823 833. Tamura K, Nei M (1993) Estimation of the number of nucleotide substitutions in the control region of mitochondrial DNA in humans and chimpanzees. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 10, 512 526. Templeton AR (1998) Nested clade analyses of phylogeographic data: testing hypotheses about gene ow and population history. Molecular Ecology, 7, 381397. Templeton AR, Routman E, Phillips CA (1995) Separating population structure from population history: a cladistic analysis of the geographical distribution of mitochondrial DNA haplotypes in the tiger salamander, Ambystoma tigrinum. Genetics, 140, 767782. Thompson JD, Gibson TJ, Plewniak F, Jeanmougin F, Higgins DG (1997) The ClustalX windows interface: exible strategies for multiple sequence alignment aided by quality analysis tools. Nucleic Acids Research, 25, 48764882. Turner A, Antn M (1997) The Big Cats and Their Fossil Relatives. Columbia University Press, New York. Ward RH, Frazier BL, Dew-Jager K, Pbo S (1991) Extensive mitochondrial diversity within a single Amerindian tribe. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 88, 87208724. Weir BS, Cockerham CC (1984) Estimating F-statistics for the analysis of population structure. Evolution, 38, 1358 1370. Wozencraft WC (1993) Felidae. In: Mammal Species of the World: a Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 2nd edn. (eds Wilson DE, Reeder DM), pp. 288300. Smithsonian Institution Press/ American Society of Mammalogists, Washington. Yang Z (1999) Phylogenetic Analysis by Maximum Likelihood (PAML), Version 2.0. University College London, London. Yang Z, Kumar S (1996) Approximate methods for estimating the patterns of nucleotide substitution and the variation of substitution rates among sites. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 13, 650659.
This study was part of a broad effort to characterize the genetic diversity, phylogenetic relationships and phylogeographic patterns of Neotropical felid species using molecular markers. Parallel studies on these species were performed addressing aspects of their reproductive physiology and exposure to infectious disease. The authors and several of their colleagues at the Laboratory of Genomic Diversity (LGD), National Cancer Institute, are studying the genetics of felids and other mammals to address issues such as phylogenetic reconstruction, genome evolution, hereditary and infectious disease, origin of phenotypic variation, and conservation of endangered species. Eduardo Eizirik is currently developing his Ph.D. at the LGD and the University of Maryland at College Park, on the genetics of coat colour variation in felids, which relates to this study in the context of the evolution of melanism in jaguar populations.
This document is a scanned copy of a printed document. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material.