Abstract

The Japanese otter lived throughout four main Japanese islands, but it has not been observed in the wild since 1979 and was declared extinct in 2012. Although recent taxonomic and molecular phylogenetic studies suggest that it should be treated as an independent species, International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List considers it as subspecies of Lutra lutra. Therefore, the taxonomic status of this species needs to be resolved. Here we determined the complete mitochondrial genome of two Japanese otters caught in Kanagawa and Kochi prefectures and five Eurasian otters (L. lutra). We reconstructed a molecular phylogenetic tree to estimate the phylogenetic position of the Japanese otter in Lutrinae using the Japanese otters and the other 11 Lutrinae species on the basis of ND5 (692 bp) and cytochrome b (1,140 bp) sequences. We observed that the two Japanese otters had close relationships with Eurasian otters, forming a monophyletic group (100% bootstrap probability). To elucidate detailed phylogenetic relationships among the Japanese and Eurasian otters, we reconstructed a maximum likelihood tree according to mitochondrial genome sequences (14,740 bp). The Japanese otter (JO1) collected in Kanagawa was deeply nested in the Eurasian otter clade, whereas the Japanese otter (JO2) collected in Kochi formed a distinct independent lineage in the Lutra clade. The estimated molecular divergences time for the ancestral lineages of the Japanese otters was 0.10 Ma (95%: 0.06–0.16 Ma) and 1.27 Ma (95%: 0.98–1.59 Ma) for JO1 and JO2 lineages, respectively. Thus, JO1 was identified as a member of L. lutra; JO2 represented the old Japanese otter lineage, which may be a distinct new species or subspecies of Lutra. We suggest that the ancestral population of the JO2 lineage migrated to Japan via the land bridge that existed between western Japanese islands and Asian continent at 1.27 Ma.

Highlights

  • Lutrinae (Mammalia, Carnivora) includes 13 species of otters, which are distributed in four continents (South America, North America, Africa, and Eurasia) and their surrounding islands [1,2]

  • The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List recognized that the following seven subspecies exist in the species of L. lutra; 1) L. l. lutra living in Europe and northern Africa: 2) L. l. nair living in southern India and Sri Lanka: 3) L. l. monticola living in northern India, Nepal, Bhutan, and Myanmar: 4) L. l. kutab living in northern India: 5) L. l. aurobrunnea living in northern India and Nepal: 6) L. l. barang living in southeast Asia: and 7) L. l. chinensis living in southern China and Taiwan

  • Imaizumi and Yoshiyuki [8] re-examined its taxonomic status on the basis of morphometric analysis using 15 Japanese otter skulls and proposed that the Japanese otters from Honshu and Shikoku Islands should be classified as a distinct species Lutra nippon, whereas the Japanese otters from Hokkaido Island should be classified as a subspecies of the Eurasian otter L. l. whiteleyi

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Summary

Introduction

Lutrinae (Mammalia, Carnivora) includes 13 species of otters, which are distributed in four continents (South America, North America, Africa, and Eurasia) and their surrounding islands [1,2]. Endo et al [9] re-examined the taxonomic status of the Japanese otter on the basis of osteometric analysis using seven skulls of otters that were caught in Shikoku. In their analysis, five of the skulls were newly analyzed, and they suggested that the morphological characteristics of the Japanese otter clearly differed from that of the Chinese populations of L. lutra and L. l. Their studies did not analyze the Japanese otter from Honshu and six subspecies of L. lutra

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