Abstract

Knowledge about the origin and evolutionary history of the bison has been improved recently owing to several genomic and paleogenomic studies published in the last two years, which elucidated large parts of the evolution of bison populations during the Upper Pleistocene and Holocene in Eurasia. The produced data, however, were interpreted in contradicting manners. Here, we have gathered, reanalyzed and compared previously published or unpublished morphometric and genetic data that have not yet been integrated and that we synthesize in a unified framework. In particular, we re-estimate dates of divergence of mitogenome lineages based on an extended dataset comprising 81 complete ancient bison mitogenomes and we revisit putative gene flow between the Bos and Bison genera based on comparative analyses of ancient and modern bison genomes, thereby questioning published conclusions. Morphometric analyses taking into account sexual dimorphism invalidate a previous claim that Bison schoetensacki was present in France during the Late Pleistocene. Both morphometric and genome analyses reveal that Eurasian bison belonging to different Bison priscus and Bison bonasus lineages maintained parallel evolutionary paths with gene flow during a long period of incomplete speciation that ceased only upon the migration of B. priscus to the American continent establishing the American bison lineage. Our nuclear genome analysis of the evolutionary history of B. bonasus allows us to reject the previous hypothesis that it is a hybrid of B. priscus and Bos primigenius. Based on present-day behavioral studies of European and American bison, we propose that apparently conflicting lines of evidence can be reconciled by positing that female bison drove the specialization of bison populations to different ecological niches while male bison drove regular homogenizing genetic exchanges between populations.

Highlights

  • Archeological and paleontological remains of bison are numerous

  • To compare various bison populations, we focused on the metacarpal bones III–IV because of their relative abundance in the archeological and paleontological record

  • European specimens dating from 5.7 kya to the early 20th century [9], alongside the Bb2 samples we identified in France up to the Middle Ages [10] allows the reconstitution of a large proportion of the evolution and diversity reduction of the wisent in Europe during the Holocene (Figure 1C)

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Summary

Introduction

Archeological and paleontological remains of bison are numerous. its evolution and taxonomy are still elusive. If it is clearly established that the American bison, B. bison, derives from a Pleistocene migration of the Eurasiatic steppe bison, B. priscus [1,2], the emergence of the European bison or wisent, B. bonasus, is unclear. It appears in the paleontological record in Europe at Diversity 2018, 10, 65; doi:10.3390/d10030065 www.mdpi.com/journal/diversity. Diversity 2018, 10, 65 the beginning of the Holocene (11.7 kiloyears ago (kya; all sample dates are expressed as calBP)). When it escaped extinction at the beginning of the 20th c. Its origin and evolution over the last 50,000 years, are still controversially discussed

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