1. Genomic Evidence for the Chinese Mountain Cat as a Wildcat Conspecific (Felis silvestris bieti) and Its Introgression to Domestic Cats
- Author
-
Xin-Zhang Qi, Xiao Xu, Shu-Jin Luo, Bing He, Jian-You Zhao, Yue-Ting Xing, Wen-Jing Li, Hao Meng, Stephen J. O'Brien, He Yu, and Yan Zhuang
- Subjects
biology ,media_common.media_genre ,Sympatric speciation ,Felis ,Zoology ,Introgression ,East Asia ,Subspecies ,biology.organism_classification ,Domestication ,Chinese mountain cat ,Gene flow ,media_common - Abstract
The enigmatic Chinese mountain cat, endemic to the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, has a controversial taxonomic status, whether a true species or conspecific with the wildcat (Felis silvestris) and whether it may have contributed to the domestication of cats (F. s. catus) in Asia. Here, we sampled 270 domestic and wild cats across China, sequenced 51 nuclear genomes, 55 mitogenomes, and multi-locus regions from modern and museum specimens. Genome-wide phylogenies supported taxonomic classification of the Chinese mountain cat as wildcat subspecies, F. s. bieti. No involvement of F. s. bieti in cat domestication in East Asia was detected, confirming that domestic cats shared a single origin from the African wildcat (F. s. lybica). A complex hybridization scenario including ancient introgression from the Asiatic wildcat (F. s. ornata) to F. s. bieti, and contemporary gene flow between F. s. bieti and sympatric domestic cats in the Tibetan region, raises the prospect of disrupting the genetic integrity of F. s. bieti, an issue with profound conservation implications.
- Published
- 2020