Publications by authors named "Hofreiter M"

Invading species along with increased anthropogenization may lead to hybridization events between wild species and closely related domesticates. As a consequence, wild species may carry introgressed alleles from domestic species, which is generally assumed to yield adverse effects in wild populations. The opposite evolutionary consequence, adaptive introgression, where introgressed genes are positively selected in the wild species, is possible but has rarely been documented.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers found that the Cat Ba langur has low genetic diversity, high inbreeding rates, and harmful mutations, indicating a significant genetic burden; however, some adaptive potential has been preserved.
  • * Unique genetic variants related to calcium and sodium metabolism were identified, suggesting these adaptations might help the langurs thrive in their specific environment of high calcium and saltwater.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Kaspar Hauser's parentage has been the subject of research and debate for nearly 200 years. As for his possible aristocratic descent through the House of Baden, there is suspicion that he was swapped as a baby, kidnapped, and kept in isolation to bring a collateral lineage to the throne. In the last 28 years, various genetic analyses have been carried out to investigate this possible aristocratic origin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) (Linnaeus, 1758), an iconic apex predator occurring in all oceans, is classified as Vulnerable globally-with global abundance having dropped to 63% of 1970s estimates,-and as Critically Endangered in Europe. Identification of evolutionary significant units and their management are crucial for conservation, especially as the white shark is facing various but often region-specific anthropogenic threats. Assessing connectivity in a cosmopolitan marine species requires worldwide sampling and high-resolution genetic markers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Tragelaphini, also known as spiral-horned antelope, is a phenotypically diverse mammalian tribe comprising a single genus, Tragelaphus. The evolutionary history of this tribe has attracted the attention of taxonomists and molecular geneticists for decades because its diversity is characterised by conflicts between morphological and molecular data as well as between mitochondrial, nuclear and chromosomal DNA. These inconsistencies point to a complex history of ecological diversification, coupled by either phenotypic convergence or introgression.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extant Old World camels (genus Camelus) contributed to the economic and cultural exchanges between the East and West for thousands of years. Although many remains have been unearthed, we know neither whether the prevalent hybridization observed between extant Camelus species also occurred between extinct lineages and the ancestors of extant Camelus species nor why some populations became extinct while others survived. To investigate these questions, we generated paleogenomic and stable isotope data from an extinct two-humped camel species, Camelus knoblochi.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Low genomic diversity is generally indicative of small population size and is considered detrimental by decreasing long-term adaptability. Moreover, small population size may promote gene flow with congeners and outbreeding depression. Here, we examine the connection between habitat availability, effective population size (N), and extinction by generating a 40× nuclear genome from the extinct blue antelope (Hippotragus leucophaeus).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • This study examines how bank voles adapt to different climates across Europe by analyzing genetic data and geographic climate variations.
  • Researchers identified 213 candidate loci for adaptation, with 74 linked to specific genes, particularly those involved in lipid metabolism and the immune system.
  • The findings highlight that both population history and climate significantly impact the genetic variation in these voles, indicating annual mean temperature as a key factor in their adaptive evolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Modern integrative taxonomy-based annelid species descriptions are detailed combining morphological data and, since the last decades, also molecular information. Historic species descriptions are often comparatively brief lacking such detail. Adoptions of species names from western literature in the past led to the assumption of cosmopolitan ranges for many species, which, in many cases, were later found to include cryptic or pseudocryptic lineages with subtle morphological differences.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Genetic diversity is lost in small and isolated populations, affecting many globally declining species. Interspecific admixture events can increase genetic variation in the recipient species' gene pool, but empirical examples of species-wide restoration of genetic diversity by admixture are lacking. Here we present multi-fold coverage genomic data from three ancient Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) approximately 2,000-4,000 years old and show a continuous or recurrent process of interspecies admixture with the Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx) that increased modern Iberian lynx genetic diversity above that occurring millennia ago despite its recent demographic decline.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The gray wolf (Canis lupus) population on the Iberian Peninsula was the largest in western and central Europe during most of the 20th century, with its size apparently never under a few hundred individuals. After partial legal protection in the 1970s in Spain, the northwest Iberian population increased to about 300 to 350 packs and then stabilized. In contrast to many current European wolf populations, which have been connected through gene flow, the Iberian wolf population has been isolated for decades.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Genetic information plays a pivotal role in species recognition and delimitation, but rare or extinct animals can be difficult to obtain genetic samples from. While natural history wet collections have proven invaluable in the description of novel species, the use of these historical samples in genetic studies has been greatly impeded by DNA degradation, especially because of formalin-fixation prior to preservation. Here, we use recently developed museum genomics approaches to determine the status of an isolated population of the elapid snake genus Hemachatus from Zimbabwe.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Straight-tusked elephants (genus: ) including their island dwarf forms are extinct enigmatic members of the Pleistocene megafauna and the most common Pleistocene elephants after the mammoths. Their taxonomic placement has been revised several times. Using palaeogenomic evidence, previous studies suggested that the European has a hybrid origin, but no molecular data have been retrieved from their Asian counterparts, leaving a gap in our knowledge of the global phylogeography and population dynamics of .

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sengis (order Macroscelidea) are small mammals endemic to Africa. The taxonomy and phylogeny of sengis has been difficult to resolve due to a lack of clear morphological apomorphies. Molecular phylogenies have already significantly revised sengi systematics, but until now no molecular phylogeny has included all 20 extant species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Gray wolves () in the Iberian Peninsula declined substantially in both range and population size in the last few centuries due to human persecution and habitat fragmentation. However, unlike many other western European populations, gray wolves never went extinct in Iberia. Since the minimum number was recorded around 1970, their numbers have significantly increased and then stabilized in recent decades.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The blue antelope is the only large African mammal known to have gone extinct in recent history, with no complete genomic data previously available due to misidentifications of museum specimens.
  • Researchers successfully obtained two draft genomes: one from a historical specimen about 200 years old and another from a fossil dating back around 9,800 years, which is currently the oldest paleogenome known from Africa.
  • Genetic analyses reveal that blue and sable antelope are closely related, with evidence of past gene flow, while indicating low genetic diversity in blue antelope, which, along with fossil findings, points to significant population decline before the species' extinction, likely exacerbated by human impact during the colonial era.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Steppe bison are a typical representative of the Mid-Late Pleistocene steppes of the northern hemisphere. Despite the abundance of fossil remains, many questions related to their genetic diversity, population structure and dispersal route are still elusive. Here, we present both near-complete and partial mitochondrial genomes, as well as a partial nuclear genome from fossil bison samples excavated from Late Pleistocene strata in northeastern China.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Limb regeneration is a fascinating and medically interesting trait that has been well preserved in arthropod lineages, particularly in crustaceans. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying arthropod limb regeneration remain largely elusive. The Chinese mitten crab shows strong regenerative capacity, a trait that has likely allowed it to become a worldwide invasive species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Iconographic evidence from Egypt suggests that watermelon pulp was consumed there as a dessert by 4,360 BP. Earlier archaeobotanical evidence comes from seeds from Neolithic settlements in Libya, but whether these were watermelons with sweet pulp or other forms is unknown. We generated genome sequences from 6,000- and 3,300-year-old seeds from Libya and Sudan, and from worldwide herbarium collections made between 1824 and 2019, and analyzed these data together with resequenced genomes from important germplasm collections for a total of 131 accessions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The grey wolf was the first animal to be domesticated into dogs and lived through the last Ice Age when many other animals went extinct.
  • Scientists studied 72 ancient wolf genomes from different places to understand how wolves were connected and how they evolved over 100,000 years.
  • They found that dogs are more closely related to ancient wolves from eastern Asia, but some dogs in the Near East and Africa share ancestors with different wolves, which means there might have been several ways dogs were domesticated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how the evolution of complex traits, specifically through the radula in freshwater snails, contributes to their diversity via adaptive specialization in foraging.
  • Using tissue-specific transcriptomes from two closely coexisting snail forms, the researchers found significant genetic divergence in radula-related genes, suggesting a strong link between radula features and ecological adaptation.
  • The findings indicate that the processes driving radula variation may also be applicable to other animal groups, pointing to broader patterns of adaptive diversification across species like cichlids and Darwin's finches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Steller's sea cow, an extinct sirenian and one of the largest Quaternary mammals, was described by Georg Steller in 1741 and eradicated by humans within 27 years. Here, we complement Steller's descriptions with paleogenomic data from 12 individuals. We identified convergent evolution between Steller's sea cow and cetaceans but not extant sirenians, suggesting a role of several genes in adaptation to cold aquatic (or marine) environments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF