Data from: Phylogeography and population history of Leopardus guigna, the smallest American felid
The guigna (Leopardus guigna) is the smallest and most-restricted New World cat species, inhabiting only around 160,000 km2 of temperate rain forests in southern South America and is currently threatened by habitat loss, fragmentation and human persecution. We investigated phylogeographic patterns o...
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Zusammenfassung: | The guigna (Leopardus guigna) is the smallest and most-restricted New
World cat species, inhabiting only around 160,000 km2 of temperate rain
forests in southern South America and is currently threatened by habitat
loss, fragmentation and human persecution. We investigated phylogeographic
patterns of genetic diversity, demographic history and barriers to gene
flow with 116 individuals sampled across the species geographic range by
analyzing 1,798 base pairs of the mtDNA (496 bp HVSI region, 720 bp NADH-5
gene, 364 bp from 16S gene and 218 bp from ATP-8 gene) and 15
microsatellite loci. Mitochondrial DNA data revealed a clear
phylogeographic pattern with moderate separation between northern and
southern Chilean populations supporting recognized subspecific partitions
based on morphology. A recent demographic expansion was inferred for the
southern-most group (San Rafael Lake), presumably due to the complete
coverage of this area during the last glacial period, 28000–16000 years
BP. Geographical barriers such as the Andes Mountains and the Chacao
Channel have partially restricted historic and more-recent gene flow and
the Chiloé Island population has diverged genetically since being
separated from the mainland 7000 years BP. This is the first study of the
genetic structure of this threatened species throughout its whole
geographic range. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1035h |