地理
古代DNA
生物
进化生物学
考古
历史
谱系学
社会学
人口学
人口
作者
Eleftheria Palkopoulou,Mark Lipson,Swapan Mallick,Svend Vendelbo Nielsen,Nadin Rohland,Sina Baleka,Emil Karpinski,Atma M. Ivancevic,Thu-Hien To,R. Daniel Kortschak,Joy M Raison,Zhipeng Qu,Tat-Jun Chin,Kurt W. Alt,Stefan Claesson,Love Dalén,R. D. E. MacPhee,Harald Meller,Alfred L. Roca,Oliver A. Ryder
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1720554115
摘要
Significance Elephantids were once among the most widespread megafaunal families. However, only three species of this family exist today. To reconstruct their evolutionary history, we generated 14 genomes from living and extinct elephantids and from the American mastodon. While previous studies examined only simple bifurcating relationships, we found that gene flow between elephantid species was common in the past. Straight-tusked elephants descend from a mixture of three ancestral populations related to the ancestor of African elephants, woolly mammoths, and present-day forest elephants. We detected interbreeding between North American woolly and Columbian mammoths but found no evidence of recent gene flow between forest and savanna elephants, demonstrating that both gene flow and isolation have been central in the evolution of elephantids.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI