The Iberian lynx was at the brink of extinction by the year 2000 but has since then, and thanks to intensive conservation measures, gone through a remarkable recovery, providing a much-welcomed and encouraging conservation success story. Genetic issues have probably contributed to the decline in the past, and the genetic management of inbreeding and genetic diversity is likely contributing to its recent recovery. The species was an early adopter of genetic and genomic approaches, and the combination of an extreme decline, an intensive monitoring and management programme and extensive genomic resources and data makes the Iberian lynx an excellent model for conservation genomics. Here, we review how genetic and genomic data have contributed to the knowledge of the species evolutionary and demographic history, the evaluation of the genetic status of the species through time, including historical and ancient data, and how this information has prompted and guided conservation actions. In the process, genomics provided valuable insights into the dynamics of functional variation in bottlenecked populations and the consequences of intraspecific and interspecific admixtures. In more applied terms, the species is subjected to an ambitious genetic monitoring and management programme, covering captive, remnant and reintroduced populations, which has succeeded in improving the genetic status of the species and thereby contributed to its recovery. Current genomic work aims at expanding these contributions with novel genomic resources and data while capitalising on extensive demographic and genealogical data provided by the ongoing non-invasive genetic monitoring programme.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.17719DOI Listing

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  • - Clinical cases of bluetongue virus infection and related deaths have been documented in Eurasian lynx.
  • - Iberian lynx populations, both wild and captive, showed frequent exposure to bluetongue virus serotypes 1 and 4 through surveillance.
  • - The exposure to these virus serotypes in the Iberian lynx may result from spillover events occurring from nearby ruminant animals.
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