Lions and brown bears colonized North America in multiple synchronous waves of dispersal across the Bering Land Bridge

Date

2021

Authors

Salis, A.T.
Bray, S.C.E.
Lee, M.S.Y.
Heiniger, H.
Barnett, R.
Burns, J.A.
Doronichev, V.
Fedje, D.
Golovanova, L.
Harington, C.R.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Molecular Ecology, 2021; 31(24):6407-6421

Statement of Responsibility

Alexander T. Salis, Sarah C.E. Bray, Michael S.Y. Lee, Holly Heiniger, Ross Barnett, James A. Burns, Vladimir Doronichev, Daryl Fedje, Liubov Golovanova, C. Richard Harington, Bryan Hockett, Pavel Kosintsev, Xulong Lai, Quentin Mackie, Sergei Vasiliev, Jacobo Weinstock, Nobuyuki Yamaguchi, Julie A Meachen, Alan Cooper, Kieren J. Mitchell

Conference Name

Abstract

The Bering Land Bridge connecting North America and Eurasia was periodically exposed and inundated by oscillating sea levels during the Pleistocene glacial cycles. This land connection allowed the intermittent dispersal of animals, including humans, between Western Beringia (far northeast Asia) and Eastern Beringia (northwest North America), changing the faunal community composition of both continents. The Pleistocene glacial cycles also had profound impacts on temperature, precipitation and vegetation, impacting faunal community structure and demography. While these palaeoenvironmental impacts have been studied in many large herbivores from Beringia (e.g., bison, mammoths, horses), the Pleistocene population dynamics of the diverse guild of carnivorans present in the region are less well understood, due to their lower abundances. In this study, we analyse mitochondrial genome data from ancient brown bears (Ursus arctos; n = 103) and lions (Panthera spp.; n = 39), two megafaunal carnivorans that dispersed into North America during the Pleistocene. Our results reveal striking synchronicity in the population dynamics of Beringian lions and brown bears, with multiple waves of dispersal across the Bering Land Bridge coinciding with glacial periods of low sea levels, as well as synchronous local extinctions in Eastern Beringia during Marine Isotope Stage 3. The evolutionary histories of these two taxa underline the crucial biogeographical role of the Bering Land Bridge in the distribution, turnover and maintenance of megafaunal populations in North America.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Published online: December 2022

Access Status

Rights

© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd

License

Call number

Persistent link to this record