Evolutionary Applications (Jan 2024)

Low but highly geographically structured genomic diversity of East Asian Eurasian otters and its conservation implications

  • Shou‐Hsien Li,
  • Chia‐fen Yeh,
  • Nian‐Hong Jang‐Liaw,
  • Shih‐Wei Chang,
  • Yu‐Hsiu Lin,
  • Cheng‐En Tsai,
  • Chi‐Cheng Chiu,
  • Chien‐Wen Chen,
  • Hui‐Ru Ke,
  • Qiaoyun Wang,
  • Yiwei Lu,
  • Kaidan Zheng,
  • Pengfei Fan,
  • Lu Zhang,
  • Yang Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.13630
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Populations of Eurasian otters Lutra lutra, one of the most widely distributed apex predators in Eurasia, have been depleted mainly since the 1950s. However, a lack of information about their genomic diversity and how they are organized geographically in East Asia severely impedes our ability to monitor and conserve them in particular management units. Here, we re‐sequenced and analyzed 20 otter genomes spanning continental East Asia, including a population at Kinmen, a small island off the Fujian coast, China. The otters form three genetic clusters (one of L. l. lutra in the north and two of L. l. chinensis in the south), which have diverged in the Holocene. These three clusters should be recognized as three conservation management units to monitor and manage independently. The heterozygosity of the East Asian otters is as low as that of the threatened carnivores sequenced. Historical effective population size trajectories inferred from genomic variations suggest that their low genomic diversity could be partially attributed to changes in the climate since the mid‐Pleistocene and anthropogenic intervention since the Holocene. However, no evidence of genetic erosion, mutation load, or high level of inbreeding was detected in the presumably isolated Kinmen Island population. Any future in situ conservation efforts should consider this information for the conservation management units.

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