Abstract

Hybridisation between wild taxa and their domestic congeners is a significant conservation issue. Domestic species frequently outnumber their wild relatives in population size and distribution and may therefore genetically swamp the native species. The European wildcat (Felis silvestris) has been shown to hybridise with domestic cats (Felis catus). Previously suggested spatially divergent introgression levels have not been confirmed on a European scale due to significant differences in the applied methods to assess hybridisation of the European wildcat. We analysed 926 Felis spp. samples from 13 European countries, using a set of 86 selected ancestry-informative SNPs, 14 microsatellites, and ten mitochondrial and Y-chromosome markers to study regional hybridisation and introgression patterns and population differentiation. We detected 51 hybrids (four F1 and 47 F2 or backcrosses) and 521 pure wildcats throughout Europe. The abundance of hybrids varied considerably among studied populations. All samples from Scotland were identified as F2 hybrids or backcrosses, supporting previous findings that the genetic integrity of that wildcat population has been seriously compromised. In other European populations, low to moderate levels of hybridisation were found, with the lowest levels being in Central and Southeast Europe. The occurrence of distinct maternal and paternal markers between wildcat and domestic cat suggests that there were no severe hybridisation episodes in the past. The overall low (< 1%) prevalence of F1 hybrids suggests a low risk of hybridisation for the long-term genetic integrity of the wildcat in most of Europe. However, regionally elevated introgression rates confirm that hybridisation poses a potential threat. We propose regional in-depth monitoring of hybridisation rates to identify factors driving hybridisation so as to develop effective strategies for conservation.

Highlights

  • Hybridisation is a naturally occurring process that leads to contradictory evolutionary outcomes

  • single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers were highly discriminating between wildcats and domestic cats but indicated low informative value concerning more fine-scale population structures

  • Using a panel of discriminative SNP markers, we confirmed that hybridisation between wildcats and their domestic congeners is a widespread phenomenon throughout the species’ range

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Summary

Introduction

Hybridisation is a naturally occurring process that leads to contradictory evolutionary outcomes. On one hand, it may decrease biodiversity by threatening species or populations with the loss of genetic diversity or outright extinction by genetic swamping Studying the distribution and causes of hybridisation between populations of wild and domestic taxa is highly relevant for species conservation. Natural hybridisation occurred between the African wildcat (Felis lybica) and other taxa in the wildcat group (Felis spp.) during their evolutionary history (Driscoll et al 2007; Ottoni et al 2017; Kitchener et al 2017). Domestic cats originally derived from F. lybica in the Near East/North Africa and today the human-mediated dispersal has resulted in a near global distribution (Driscoll et al 2007; Ottoni et al 2017)

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