Data from: Phylogeographic analyses of American black bears (Ursus americanus) suggest four glacial refugia and complex patterns of post-glacial admixture

Studies of species with continental distributions continue to identify intraspecific lineages despite continuous habitat. Lineages may form due to isolation by distance, adaptation, divergence across barriers, or genetic drift following range expansion. We investigated lineage diversification and ad...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Puckett, Emily E., Etter, Paul D., Johnson, Eric A., Eggert, Lori S.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.dc02b
http://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.dc02b
Description
Summary:Studies of species with continental distributions continue to identify intraspecific lineages despite continuous habitat. Lineages may form due to isolation by distance, adaptation, divergence across barriers, or genetic drift following range expansion. We investigated lineage diversification and admixture within American black bears (Ursus americanus) across their range using 22 k single nucleotide polymorphisms and mitochondrial DNA sequences. We identified three subcontinental nuclear clusters which we further divided into nine geographic regions: Alaskan (Alaska-East), eastern (Central Interior Highlands, Great Lakes, Northeast, Southeast), and western (Alaska-West, West, Pacific Coast, Southwest). We estimated that the western cluster diverged 67 ka, before eastern and Alaskan divergence 31 ka; these divergence dates contrasted with those from the mitochondrial genome where clades A and B diverged 1.07 Ma, and clades A-east and A-west diverged 169 ka. We combined estimates of divergence timing with hindcast species distribution models to infer glacial refugia for the species in Beringia, Pacific Northwest, Southwest, and Southeast. Our results show a complex arrangement of admixture due to expansion out of multiple refugia. The delineation of the genomic population clusters was inconsistent with the ranges for 16 previously described subspecies. Ranges for U. a. pugnax and U. a. cinnamomum were concordant with admixed clusters, calling into question how to order taxa below the species level. Additionally, our finding that U. a. floridanus has not diverged from U. a. americanus also suggests that morphology and genetics should be reanalyzed to assess taxonomic designations relevant to the conservation management of the species. : Puckett_etal-MaxEntInputGeographic coordinates used as input in MaxEnt species distribution model.Puckett_etal-mtDNA_HaplotypeListList of samples and the identified mitochondrial haplotype. See GenBank accessions: AY334363–AY334367 (Onorato et al 2004), FJ619652–FJ619659 (Van Den Bussche et al 2009), KJ406324-KJ406336 (Puckett et al 2014), and KM230048-KM230113 (this paper).Puckett_etal-SSR_DataMicrosatellite genotypes (15 loci) used for inference of effective population size by regional cluster.Puckett_etal-U_amer_29k_SNPsPED file with 29,213 SNPs for Ursus americanus. Data were clustered the following way: 1- AK-East, 2- Central Interior Highlands, 3- Great Lakes, 4- Northeast, 5- Southeast, 6- AK-West, 7- West, 8- Southwest, 9- Pacific Coast.Puckett_etal-U_amer_29k_SNPsMAP file that accompanies PED file for analyzing SNP data in PLINK.