Data

Coexistence, extinction and survival—The evolutionary history of Bison species in Western Eurasia (Supplementary Table S1)

Adelaide University
Llamas, Bastien ; van Loenen, Ayla ; Mitchell, Kieren ; Hofman-Kamiń; ska, Emilia ; Bocherens, Hervé; ; Heiniger, Holly ; Pacher, Martina ; Makowiecki, Daniel ; Pilič; iauskienė; , Giedrė; ; G Drucker, Dorotheé; ; Brown, David ; Thomas, Zoë; ; Turney, Christian ; Kowalczyk, Rafał; ; Cooper, Alan
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.25909/29253974.v1&rft.title=Coexistence, extinction and survival—The evolutionary history of Bison species in Western Eurasia (Supplementary Table S1)&rft.identifier=10.25909/29253974.v1&rft.publisher=The University of Adelaide&rft.description=European bison (Bison bonasus) are one of the few European megafaunal species to survive the Late Pleistocene mass megafaunal extinction. Current conservation management efforts have proceeded in the absence of information about their evolutionary history, which has been obscured by recent severe population bottlenecks. We characterised mitochondrial genomes from 135 ancient bison samples spanning >50 thousand years (>50 ka) across the Eurasian continent and detected three distinct phylogenetic groups: two distinct clades of European bison and the extinct steppe bison (Bison priscus). The geographical distributions and dietary/ecological signatures of the three groups overlapped during the Late Pleistocene climate cycles and track environmental changes including vegetation cover and human impacts. The abundance of European bison specimens responded negatively to the extent of forest cover, including Holocene cycles of abrupt atmospheric-ocean circulation changes originating in the North Atlantic. European bison remain preferentially adapted to an open environment, but with today’s anthropogenic landscapes, are now largely restricted to forest habitats with negative implications under scenarios of future environmental change.&rft.creator=Llamas, Bastien &rft.creator=van Loenen, Ayla &rft.creator=Mitchell, Kieren &rft.creator=Hofman-Kamińska, Emilia &rft.creator=Bocherens, Hervé &rft.creator=Heiniger, Holly &rft.creator=Pacher, Martina &rft.creator=Makowiecki, Daniel &rft.creator=Piličiauskienė, Giedrė &rft.creator=G Drucker, Dorotheé &rft.creator=Brown, David &rft.creator=Thomas, Zoë &rft.creator=Turney, Christian &rft.creator=Kowalczyk, Rafał &rft.creator=Cooper, Alan &rft.edition=1&rft_rights= https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/&rft_subject=Phylogeny and comparative analysis&rft_subject=Biogeography and phylogeography&rft_subject=Bison&rft_subject=Ancient DNA&rft_subject=European bison&rft_subject=Bison bonasus&rft_subject=Steppe bison&rft_subject=Bison priscus&rft_subject=Mitochondrial DNA&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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European bison (Bison bonasus) are one of the few European megafaunal species to survive the Late Pleistocene mass megafaunal extinction. Current conservation management efforts have proceeded in the absence of information about their evolutionary history, which has been obscured by recent severe population bottlenecks. We characterised mitochondrial genomes from 135 ancient bison samples spanning >50 thousand years (>50 ka) across the Eurasian continent and detected three distinct phylogenetic groups: two distinct clades of European bison and the extinct steppe bison (Bison priscus). The geographical distributions and dietary/ecological signatures of the three groups overlapped during the Late Pleistocene climate cycles and track environmental changes including vegetation cover and human impacts. The abundance of European bison specimens responded negatively to the extent of forest cover, including Holocene cycles of abrupt atmospheric-ocean circulation changes originating in the North Atlantic. European bison remain preferentially adapted to an open environment, but with today’s anthropogenic landscapes, are now largely restricted to forest habitats with negative implications under scenarios of future environmental change.

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Identifiers
ACN 633 798 857