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Phylogeographic analyses of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocola; Carnivora, Felidae) reveal a complex demographic history

Abstract

The pampas cat is a small felid that occurs in open habitats throughout much of South America. Previous studies have revealed intriguing patterns of morphological differentiation and genetic structure among its populations, as well as molecular evidence for hybridization with the closely related L. tigrinus. Here we report phylogeographic analyses encompassing most of its distribution (focusing particularly on Brazilian specimens, which had been poorly sampled in previous studies), using a novel dataset comprising 2,143 bp of the mitogenome, along with previously reported mtDNA sequences. Our data revealed strong population strutucture and supported a west-to-east colonization process in this species’ history. We detected two population expansion events, one older (ca. 200 thousand years ago [kya]) in western South America and another more recent (ca. 60-50 kya) in eastern areas, coinciding with the expansion of savanna environments in Brazil. Analyses including L. tigrinus individuals bearing introgressed mtDNA from L. colocola showed a complete lack of shared haplotypes between species, indicating that their hybridization was ancient. Finally, we observed a close relationship between Brazilian/Uruguayan L. colocola haplotypes and those sampled in L. tigrinus, indicating that their hybridization was likely related to the demographic expansion of L. colocola into eastern South America.

Keywords:
Phylogeography; population genetics; mitochondrial DNA; conservation genetics; historical demography

Introduction

The formation of the Panamanian Isthmus led to the colonization of South America by several lineages of North American mammals, some of which gave rise to endemic Neotropical adaptive radiations (Eizirik, 2012Eizirik E (2012) A molecular view on the evolutionary history and biogeography of Neotropical carnivores (Mammalia, Carnivora), in: Patterson BD, Costa LP (eds) Bones, Clones and Biomes: The History and Geography of Recent Neotropical Mammals. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp 123-142.). This is the case of the genus Leopardus (Mammalia, Carnivora, Felidae), composed by at least eight species of small and medium-sized cats that occur in a variety of habitats across the Neotropics, and whose diversification began 3 to 5 million years ago (MYA) (Nowell and Jackson, 1996Nowell K and Jackson P (1996) Wilds Cats: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. IUCN, Gland, 382 pp.; Eisenberg and Redford, 1999Eisenberg JF and Redford KH (1999) Mammals of the Neotropics, Vol. 3. The Central Tropics: Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 609 pp.; Johnson et al., 2006Johnson WE, Eizirik E, Pecon-Slattery J, Murphy WJ, Antunes A, Teeling E and O’Brien SJ (2006) The late Miocene radiation of modern Felidae: A genetic assessment. Science 311:73-77.; Trigo et al., 2013Trigo TC, Schneider A, de Oliveira TG, Lehugeur LM, Silveira L, Freitas TR and Eizirik E (2013) Molecular data reveal complex hybridization and a cryptic species of neotropical wild cat. Curr Biol 23:2528-2533.; Li et al., 2016)Li G, Davis BW, Eizirik E and Murphy WJ (2016) Phylogenomic evidence for ancient hybridization in the genomes of living cats (Felidae). Genome Res 26:1-11..

The pampas cat (Leopardus colocola) is considered one of the least known species of this genus (Silveira 1995Silveira L (1995) Notes on the distribution and natural history of the pampas cat, Felis colocolo, in Brazil. Mammalia 59:284-288.; Nowell and Jackson, 1996Nowell K and Jackson P (1996) Wilds Cats: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. IUCN, Gland, 382 pp.). It presents an extensive geographic distribution (Figure 1), occurring from Ecuador (or perhaps southwestern Colombia) to the Strait of Magellan. It is mainly associated with open habitats, such as the Argentinean and Uruguayan pampas, Bolivian and Paraguayan Chaco and the high altitude fields along the Andean mountain chain, but may also be found in forested habitats. In Brazil, it is restricted to open habitats such as the Pampas biome in southern Brazil and the Cerrado and Pantanal biomes in the central and northeastern parts of the country (Silveira, 1995Silveira L (1995) Notes on the distribution and natural history of the pampas cat, Felis colocolo, in Brazil. Mammalia 59:284-288.; Nowell and Jackson, 1996Nowell K and Jackson P (1996) Wilds Cats: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan. IUCN, Gland, 382 pp.; Eisenberg and Redford, 1999Eisenberg JF and Redford KH (1999) Mammals of the Neotropics, Vol. 3. The Central Tropics: Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 609 pp.; Pereira et al., 2002Pereira J, Varela D and Fracassi N (2002) Pampas cat in Argentina: Is it absent from the pampas? Cat News 36:20-22.; Ruiz-Garcia et al., 2003Ruiz-Garcia M, Payán CE and Hernández-Camacho JI (2003) Possible records of Lynchailurus in south-western Colombia. Cat News 38:35-37.; Villalba and Delgado, 2005Villalba L and Delgado E (2005) Pampas cat photographed in High Southwest Bolivia. Cat News 42:31.; Godoi et al., 2010Godoi MN, Teribele R, Bianchi RC, Olifiers N, Concone HVB and Xavier NLF (2010) New records of pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo, Molina 1782) for Mato Grosso do Sul State, Brazil. Cat News 52:28-29., Queirolo et al., 2013Queirolo D, Almeida LB, Beisiegel B and Oliveira TG (2013) Avaliação do risco de extinção do gato-palheiro Leopardus colocolo (Molina, 1782) no Brasil. Biodiv Bras 3:91-98., Lucherini et al., 2016Lucherini M, Eizirik E, de Oliveira T, Pereira J and Williams RSR (2016) Leopardus colocolo. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016:e.T15309A97204446.). The pampas cat is considered Near Threatened worldwide, but its distinctive evolutionary units (see below) can all be considered as Vulnerable individually (Queirolo et al., 2013Queirolo D, Almeida LB, Beisiegel B and Oliveira TG (2013) Avaliação do risco de extinção do gato-palheiro Leopardus colocolo (Molina, 1782) no Brasil. Biodiv Bras 3:91-98., Lucherini et al., 2016Lucherini M, Eizirik E, de Oliveira T, Pereira J and Williams RSR (2016) Leopardus colocolo. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016:e.T15309A97204446.), or perhaps even more severely threatened, pending on regional in-depth analyses.

Figure 1
Geographic distribution of Leopardus colocola and L. tigrinus samples analyzed in this study. Dotted circles indicate the Brazilian regions considered in the analyses. The numbers in squares indicate the number of samples belonging to the same geographic region. The blue and red circles represent samples with mitochondrial sequences generated by this study, while yellow circles represent the geographic origin of haplotypes reported by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68.. The inset map on the left shows the geographic distribution of L. colocola (dark grey) [modified from the IUCN (2011) IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesIUCN Red List of Threatened Species, http://www.iucnredlist.org.
http://www.iucnredlist.org...
, http://www.iucnredlist.org].

Substantial morphological variation has been observed across pampas cat regional populations, leading to considerable controversy regarding its species-level taxonomic status (see Kitchener et al. [2017]Kitchener AC, Breitenmoser-Würsten C, Eizirik E, Gentry A, Werdelin L, Wilting A, Yamaguchi N, Abramov AV, Christiansen P, Driscoll C, et al. (2017) A revised taxonomy of the Felidae. The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group. Cat News Special Issue 11, 80 pp. for a recent review). Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36., for example, based on cranial morphology and coat patterns, suggested the subdivision of the pampas cat into three distinct species (L. colocolo, L. braccatus and L. pajeros), each containing subspecies-level units. A subsequent molecular study based on three mitochondrial genes (16S rDNA, ATP8 and ND5) indicated strong genetic structuring among different pampas cat populations (Johnson et al., 1999Johnson WE, Pecon-Slattery J, Eizirik E, Kim J, Menotti-Raymond M, Bonacic C, Cambre R, Crawshaw P, Nunes A, Seuánez HN, et al. (1999) Disparate phylogeography patterns of molecular genetic variation in four closely related South American small cat species. Mol Ecol 8:S79-S94.), but did not support the species-level subdivision proposed by Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36., given that the observed phylogroups were rather recently diverged. Nevertheless, a subsequent systematic treatise (Wozencraft, 2005Wozencraft WC (2005) Carnivora, in: Wilson DE and Reeder DM (eds) Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, pp 532-628.) recognized the three species proposed by Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36., and a more recent morphological analysis (Nascimento FO, 2010, Doctoral thesis, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo) further proposed the subdivision of the complex into six distinct species.

The existence of highly structured populations in this cat species has been supported by recent molecular studies (Napolitano et al., 2008Napolitano C, Bennett M, Johnson WE, O’Brien SJ, Marquet PA, Barría I, Poulin E and Iriarte A (2008) Ecological and biogeographical inferences on two sympatric and enigmatic Andean cat species using genetic identification of faecal samples. Mol Ecol 17:678-690.; Cossíos et al., 2009Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68.), although not always matching the proposed morphological partitions. The study of Napolitano et al. (2008)Napolitano C, Bennett M, Johnson WE, O’Brien SJ, Marquet PA, Barría I, Poulin E and Iriarte A (2008) Ecological and biogeographical inferences on two sympatric and enigmatic Andean cat species using genetic identification of faecal samples. Mol Ecol 17:678-690. was concentrated in areas of northern Chile, where the authors found a lack of haplotype sharing with neighbouring geographic areas, supporting the hypothesis that some portions of the pampas cat distribution have experience significant periods of demographic isolation from other regions. The subsequent study by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68. reported analyses of mitochondrial genes (ND5, control region and ATP8) and microsatellie loci for a data set focused on the central Andes. These authors found strong genetic differentiation among several regional populations, supporting the recognition of at least four Management Units (MU) for conservation purposes.

In spite of the advances provided by these genetic analyses, the evolutionary history of the pampas cat remains incompletely understood, mainly because these studies have focused on partial sampling of its geographic distribution. Populations of central and southern Brazil, for example, were poorly represented (or unrepresented) in these earlier investigations, and thus their evolutionary relationships with those from western South America remain obscure.

Interestingly, Brazilian populations of L. colocola present an additional layer of evolutionary complexity, as we have documented that they underwent a massive historical process of hibridization and unidirectional introgression affecting a congeneric species, Leopardus tigrinus (Trigo et al., 2013Trigo TC, Schneider A, de Oliveira TG, Lehugeur LM, Silveira L, Freitas TR and Eizirik E (2013) Molecular data reveal complex hybridization and a cryptic species of neotropical wild cat. Curr Biol 23:2528-2533.). Remarkably, this process has led to a complete replacement of the L. tigrinus mitochondrial genome by that originating from L. colocola, with no evidence of this historical admixture having been so far detected in any nuclear marker (Trigo et al., 2013Trigo TC, Schneider A, de Oliveira TG, Lehugeur LM, Silveira L, Freitas TR and Eizirik E (2013) Molecular data reveal complex hybridization and a cryptic species of neotropical wild cat. Curr Biol 23:2528-2533.). This uncommon pattern is likely a consequence of ancient episodes of hybridization, probably involving primary matings between L. colocola females and L. tigrinus males, followed by backcrossing of female hybrids to male L. tigrinus for multiple generations. Such crosses are expected to dilute the signal of introgression in the nuclear genome due to several generations of cumulative backcrossing, explaining the genetic pattern we have observed.

In addition, according to Trigo et al. (2013)Trigo TC, Schneider A, de Oliveira TG, Lehugeur LM, Silveira L, Freitas TR and Eizirik E (2013) Molecular data reveal complex hybridization and a cryptic species of neotropical wild cat. Curr Biol 23:2528-2533., L. tigrinus was found to be mainly associated to two Brazilian Biomes, Cerrado and Caatinga, which tend to present open/dry vegetation types that are also the typical habitats used by L. colocola in Brazil, in stark contrast to the Atlantic Forest associated with L. guttulus. This observation led us to hypothesize that its ancient hybridization with L. colocola might have been involved with adaptation of L. tigrinus to such open biomes. Such observations suggest an intriguing evolutionary process that still requires further investigation, including the estimation of its temporal, spatial and demographic contexts. At this time, the only genetic system that allows an assessment of these issues is the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), since it so far holds the only available record of this ancient episode of hybridization.

In this context, the main goal of this present study was to investigate the evolutionary history of L. colocola based on the analysis of mtDNA segments, aiming to characterize its phylogeographic patterns and demographic history, as well as to gain additional insights into its hybridization/introgression event with L. tigrinus. In particular, we pursued the following specific objectives: 1) to assess the genetic relationships between western L. colocola populations and those from eastern South America (Brazil and Uruguay); 2) to estimate the geographic origin and age of the mitochondrial DNA haplotypes introgressed into L. tigrinus, and 3) to analyze the correlation between the genetically identified groups and the morphology-based taxa proposed by Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36.. Clarifying these issues is relevant not only from an evolutionary biology and taxonomy standpoint, but should also have significant impacts on conservation and management strategies on behalf of this species.

Materials and Methods

Sample collection

We generated mtDNA sequence data from 40 L. colocola individuals from Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Chile and Bolivia, as well as 28 L. tigrinus from central and northeastern Brazil (see Figure 1 and Supplemental Table S1). Blood samples were collected from wild animals captured for ecological studies, as well as from captive individuals (preferentially with known geographic origin), and were preserved in a salt saturated solution (100mM Tris, 100mM EDTA, 2% SDS). Tissue samples were obtained from road-killed specimens and maintained in 96% ethanol. Samples of Leopardus pardalis (ocelot) and Leopardus wiedii (margay) were also included as outgroups in some of the analyses.

DNA extraction, amplification and sequencing

DNA extraction was performed using a standard phenol/chloroform protocol (Sambrook et al., 1989Sambrook J, Fritsch EF and Maniatis T (1989) Molecular Cloning, 2nd edition. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, New York.) or using the DNeasy Blood and Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) or PureLinkTM Genomic DNA Mini Kit (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) following the manufacturers’ instructions. All DNA samples were quantified in a 1% agarose gel stained with GelRed® (Biotium Inc., Fremont, CA, USA) using the LowMass DNA Ladder (Invitrogen).

We amplified four mtDNA segments using the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR; Saiki et al., 1985Saiki RK, Scharf S, Faloona F, Mullis KB, Horn GT, Erlich HA and Arnheim N (1985) Enzymatic amplification of beta-globin genomic sequences and restriction site analysis for diagnosis of sickle cell anemia. Science 230:1350-1354.): (I) the 5’ portion of the ND5 gene, using primers described by Trigo et al. (2008)Trigo TC, Freitas TRO, Kunzler G, Cardoso L, Silva JCR, Johnson WE, O’Brien SJ, Bonatto SL and Eizirik E (2008) Inter-species hybridization among Neotropical cats of the genus Leopardus, and evidence for an introgressive hybrid zone between L. geoffroyi and L. tigrinus in southern Brazil. Mol Ecol 17:4317-4333.; (II) the complete cytochrome b gene [Cytb] using primers reported by Tchaicka et al. (2007)Tchaicka L, Eizirik E, Oliveira TG, Cândido JF and Freitas TRO (2007) Phylogeography and population history of the crab-eating fox (Cerdocyon thous). Mol Ecol 16:819-838. or those described by Irwin et al. (1991)Irwin DM, Kocher TD and Wilson AC (1991) Evolution of the cytochrome b gene of mammals. J Mol Evol 32:128-144. and Koepfli and Wayne (1998)Koepfli KP and Wayne RK (1998) Phylogenetic relationships of otters (Carnivora: Mustelidae) based on mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences. J Zool (Lond) 246:401-416., which divide the gene into two sub-segments as an alternative approach for use with degraded DNA samples; (III) a segment of the ATP8 gene using primers described by Johnson et al. (1998)Johnson WE, Culver M, Iriarte JA, Eizirik E, Seymour KL and O’Brien SJ (1998) Tracking the evolution of the elusive Andean Mountain Cat (Oreailurus jacobita) from mitochondrial DNA. J Hered 89:227-232.; and (IV) the last portion of the first hypervariable segment of the mtDNA control region [CR], using primers described by Tchaicka et al. (2007)Tchaicka L, Eizirik E, Oliveira TG, Cândido JF and Freitas TRO (2007) Phylogeography and population history of the crab-eating fox (Cerdocyon thous). Mol Ecol 16:819-838. and Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68..

PCR amplifications were performed in a final volume of 20 μL, containing 1X PCR buffer (Invitrogen), 0.2 μM of each primer, 0.2 mM dNTPs, 1.5-2.0 mM MgCl2 (Invitrogen), 0.2 U Platinum® Taq Polymerase (Invitrogen) and 5-20 ng of genomic DNA. The addition of 0.2% Triton X-100 to the PCR reaction was used to remove PCR inhibitors in the case of the ND5, Cyt-b and control region segments. For these three segments, the PCR conditions were identical and began with one step of 94°C for 3 min, 5 cycles (Touchdown) of 94°C for 45 s, 55-51°C for 45 s, 72°C for 1 min 30 s followed by 40 cycles of 94°C for 45 s, 50°C for 30 s, 72°C for 1 min 30 s and final extension of 72°C for 30 min. Thermocycling conditions for the ATP8 gene consisted of an initial denaturing step at 94°C for 3 min followed by 35 cycles of 94°C for 45 s, 50°C for 45 s, 72°C for 1 min 30 s and final extension of 72°C for 10 min.

PCR products were visualized on a 1% agarose gel stained with GelRed® (Biotium Inc.) and then purified using a protocol based on precipitation with ammonium acetate and isopropanol, or the enzymatic method with the enzymes Exonuclease I (EXO I) and Shrimp Alkaline Phosphatase (SAP). Both strands of each PCR product were sequenced using the DYEnamic ET Dye Terminator Sequencing Kit (GE Healthcare) and analyzed in a MegaBACE 1000 automated sequencer (GE Healthcare). For the mtDNA control region, due to the occurrence of a repetitive region which generates high levels of heteroplasmy (see Eizirik et al., 1998Eizirik E, Bonatto SL, Johnson WE, Crawshaw Jr PG, Vié JC, Brousset DM, O’Brien SJ and Salzano FM (1998) Phylogeographic patterns and evolution of the mitochondrial DNA control region in two Neotropical cats (Mammalia, Felidae). J Mol Evol 47:613-624. and Kim et al., 2001Kim JH, Eizirik E, O’Brien SJ and Johnson WE (2001) Structure and patterns of sequence variation in the mitochondrial DNA control region of the great cats. Mitochondrion 14:279-292. for more examples in other felids), which hampered the stable annealing of the forward primer, only the reverse strand was sequenced. In this case, samples were amplified and sequenced at least twice independently to assess the reproducibility of the observed sequence.

The visualization of electropherograms, as well as the construction of double-strand consensus sequences for each sample, were performed with Geneious Pro 5.5.2 (Drummond et al., 2011Drummond AJ, Ashton B, Buxton S, Cheung M, Cooper A, Duran C, Field M, Heled J, Kearse M, Markowitz S, et al. (2011) Geneious v. 5.4, http://www.geneious.com.
http://www.geneious.com...
). As a complement to data generated in this study, we added sequences previously obtained by Trigo et al. (2013)Trigo TC, Schneider A, de Oliveira TG, Lehugeur LM, Silveira L, Freitas TR and Eizirik E (2013) Molecular data reveal complex hybridization and a cryptic species of neotropical wild cat. Curr Biol 23:2528-2533. for the ND5 gene, which include 15 L. colocola and 21 L. tigrinus individuals (KF679939, KF679949, KF679950, KF679952 - KF679955, KF679958 – KF679961). Shorter sequences for ATP8, ND5 and control region (133, 270 and 170 base pairs [bp], respectively) reported by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68. and covering the Andean portion of the L. colocola distribution were also included (FJ648644, FJ648646, FJ648647, FJ648654, FJ648655, FJ648659 – FJ648662, FJ648665, FJ648667, FJ648668, FJ648670, FJ648672, FJ648673, FJ648675, FJ648679, FJ648681, FJ648683) (Figure 1). Novel sequences generated in this study were deposited in GenBank.

Descriptive analyses and phylogenetic inference

DNA sequences were aligned using the MUSCLE algorithm (Edgar, 2004Edgar RC (2004) MUSCLE: multiple sequence alignment with high accuracy and high throughput. Nucleic Acids Res 32:1792-1797.) implemented in MEGA 5 (Tamura et al., 2011Tamura K, Peterson D, Peterson N, Stecher G, Nei M and Kumar S (2011) MEGA5: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis using maximum likelihood, evolutionary distance, and maximum parsimony methods. Mol Biol Evol 28:2731-2739.). The alignments were checked and edited manually when necessary. Basic statistics of genetic diversity, including the number of variable sites (V), number of parsimony-informative sites (PI), number of haplotypes (h), nucleotide diversity (π) and haplotype diversity (Hd) were estimated using MEGA 5, ARLEQUIN v.3.5 (Excoffier and Lischer, 2010Excoffier L and Lischer HEL (2010) Arlequin suite ver 3.5: A new series of programs to perform population genetics analyses under Linux and Windows. Mol Ecol Resour 10:564-567.) and DnaSP 5.0 (Librado and Rozas 2009Librado P and Rozas J (2009) DnaSP v5: A software for comprehensive analysis of DNA polymorphism data. Bioinformatics 25:1451-1452.).

Two data sets were established for use in the analyses described below: (i) Data set A (DSA) with all sequences generated in this study as well as data reported by Trigo et al. (2013)Trigo TC, Schneider A, de Oliveira TG, Lehugeur LM, Silveira L, Freitas TR and Eizirik E (2013) Molecular data reveal complex hybridization and a cryptic species of neotropical wild cat. Curr Biol 23:2528-2533.; and (ii) Data set B (DSB) with all the sequences from DSA, complemented by segments reported by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68.. The sequences analyzed by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68. were shorter in length, so DSB has a broader geographic coverage but a matrix with more missing data.

Phylogenetic analyses were performed with only one representative of each haplotype, and initially employed two different optimality criteria: Bayesian Inference (BI) and Maximum Likelihood (ML). The software jModelTest 0.1.1 (Guindon and Gascuel, 2003Guindon S and Gascuel O (2003) A simple, fast, and accurate algorithm to estimate large phylogenies by maximum likelihood. Syst Biol 52:696-704.; Posada, 2008Posada D (2008) jModelTest: Phylogenetic Model Averaging. Mol Biol Evol 25:1253-1256.) was used to determine the best model of nucleotide substitution, applying the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC; Akaike, 1974Akaike H (1974) A new look at the statistical identification model. IEEE T Automat Contr 19:716-723.). For the Bayesian inference, the best model was inferred separately for each of the four mitochondrial segments. We used PhyML 3.0 (Guindon et al., 2010Guindon S, Dufayard JF, Lefort V, Anisimova M, Hordijk W and Gascuel O (2010) New algorithms and methods to estimate maximum-likelihood phylogenies: Assessing the performance of PhyML 3.0. Syst Biol 59:307-321.) for the ML analyses, with trees inferred using a heuristic search with a random starting tree, Subtree Pruning Regrafting (SPR) + Nearest-Neighbor-Interchange (NNI), and support estimated by 1,000 bootstrap pseudoreplicates. For initial BI analyses we used MrBayes 3.1 (Ronquist and Huelsenbeck, 2003Ronquist F and Huelsenbeck JP (2003) MrBayes 3: Bayesian phylogenetic inference under mixed models. Bioinformatics 19:1572-1574.), including two independent Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) runs, each containing four Metropolis-coupled chains (one cold and three heated) for five million generations. Trees were sampled every 100 generations, discarding the first 2,500 trees as burn-in. The program Tracer 1.5 (Rambaut and Drummond, 2007Rambaut A and Drummond AJ (2007) Tracer Analysis Tool v. 1.4, http://beast.bio.ed.ac.uk/tracer.
http://beast.bio.ed.ac.uk/tracer...
) was used for visualization and analyses of MrBayes output files.

Final phylogenetic analyses employed the relaxed Bayesian approached implemented in BEAST 1.6.2 (Drummond and Rambaut, 2007Drummond A and Rambaut A (2007) BEAST: Bayesian evolutionary analysis by sampling trees. BMC Evol Biol 7:214.), based on a two-stage strategy. We initially ran the software to estimate the substitution rate of each mitochondrial segment (ND5, Cytb, ATP8 and CR), using only a few divergent haplotypes and three node-based calibrations. These were based on the credibility intervals estimated previously (Johnson et al., 2006Johnson WE, Eizirik E, Pecon-Slattery J, Murphy WJ, Antunes A, Teeling E and O’Brien SJ (2006) The late Miocene radiation of modern Felidae: A genetic assessment. Science 311:73-77.) for three nodes within the genus Leopardus: 1) the basal diversification of the genus (2.02 – 4.25 MYA); 2) the divergence between L. pardalis and L. wiedii (1.01 – 2.41 Mya); and 3) the basal divergence in the clade (L. jacobita + L. colocola + L. tigrinus + L. geoffroyi + L. guigna) (1.68 – 3.56 Mya). For these runs we used a uniform prior, an uncorrelated lognormal relaxed molecular clock and a Yule prior for the tree, and performed the same analysis separately for the two data sets (DSA and DSB). Trees were linked and the substitution model was set as unlinked, allowing the incorporation of the different substitution models estimated for each segment with jModelTest. We ran BEAST for 50,000,000 steps, sampling every 5,000 iterations, after a discarded burn-in of 50,000 steps. Convergence to the stationary distribution and sufficient sampling were assessed with TRACER. The mean substitution rate (per site per year) obtained in these analyses were as follows: DSA: ND5 = 2.52 x 10-8, Cytb = 2.48 x 10-8, ATP8 = 2.93 x 10-8, CR = 3.53 x 10-8; DSB: ND5 = 2.53 x 10-8, Cytb = 2.42 x 10-8, ATP8 = 3.87 x 10-8, CR = 4.89 x 10-8.

The second set of BEAST analyses incorporated the mean substitution rates estimated in the first round for each mitochondrial partition, aiming to simultaneously estimate the phylogenetic tree and the TMRCA (the time to the most recent common ancestor) of each pampas cat phylogroup. In this round, we included one copy of all identified haplotypes and assumed a strict clock and a coalescent (constant size) tree prior. The analysis was performed separately for each data set (DSA and DSB) and was run for 100,000,000 steps, sampling every 10,000 iterations, after a discarded burn-in of 100,000 steps, taking into account the stabilization of the traces and the sampled parameters.

Demographic history and population genetic structure

In addition to the phylogeny-based approaches, haplotype networks were constructed using the median-joining approach (Bandelt et al., 1999Bandelt HJ, Forster P and Röhl A (1999) Median-joining networks for inferring intraspecific phylogenies. Mol Biol Evol 16:37-48.) implemented in NETWORK 4.6.0.0 (http://www.fluxus-engineering.com/sharenet.htm) to depict phylogenetic, geographic and potential ancestor-descendent relationships among sequences. In parallel, population structure analyses were performed initially with the software BAPS (Bayesian Analysis of Population Structure) (Corander and Tang, 2007Corander J and Tang J (2007) Bayesian analysis of population structure based on linked molecular information. Math Biosci 205:19-21.; Corander et al., 2008Corander J, Marttinen P, Sirén J and Tang J (2008). Enhanced Bayesian modeling in BAPS software for learning genetic structures of populations. BMC Bioinformatics 9:539.). We ran the mixture model to assess the most probable number of genetic groups present in our sample, using a range from 1 to 10, and repeated the analysis five times to check for stability.

As a measure of differentiation among geographic groups, we estimated the fixation index ΦST using an Analysis of Molecular Variance (AMOVA) approach (Excoffier et al., 1992Excoffier L, Smouse P and Quattro J (1992) Analysis of Molecular Variance inferred from metric distances among DNA haplotypes: application to human mitochondrial DNA restriction data. Genetics 131:479-491.) implemented in ARLEQUIN. The correlation between genetic and geographic distances was assessed using a Mantel test (Mantel, 1967Mantel N (1967) The detection of disease clustering and a generalized regression approach. Cancer Res 27:209-220.) with 100,000 permutations in the program ALLELES IN SPACE (AIS; Miller, 2005Miller MP (2005) ALLELES IN SPACE: Computer software for the joint analysis o interindividual spatial and genetic information. J Hered 96:711-724.).

To obtain estimates of matrilineal gene flow among different geographic populations, we used the coalescent-based Bayesian method implemented in LAMARC (Kuhner, 2006Kuhner MK (2006) LAMARC 2.0: maximum likelihood and Bayesian estimation of population parameters. Bioinform Appl Note 22:768-770.). This software was used to estimate the parameter theta, which is the effective population size (Ne) scaled by the mutation rate (μ), along with pairwise migration rates (M) for all the defined populations. The number of migrants per generation was obtained by multiplying M by theta of the recipient population. We performed three independent runs of the Bayesian search strategy, including one long chain of 3,000,000 steps with a sampling increment of 100 (resulting in a total of 30,000 sampled trees), following a burn-in period of 3,000 sampled genealogies. The same analysis was conducted independently for both data sets (DSA and DSB), and the results were visualized in TRACER.

To estimate historical demographic parameters and to evaluate possible scenarios for the colonization of eastern South America by L. colocola, we performed Fu’s Fs neutrality test (Fu, 1997Fu YX (1997) Statistical test of neutrality of mutations against population growth, hitchhiking and background selection. Genetics 147:915-925.) and Mismatch Distribution Analyses (Rogers and Harpending, 1992Rogers AR and Harpending HC (1992) Population growth makes waves in the distribution of pairwise genetic differences. Mol Biol Evol 9:552-569.) with DnaSP and ARLEQUIN. These tests are used with mtDNA data (assuming selective neutrality) to detect demographic events such as expansions, contractions and bottlenecks (Ramirez-Soriano et al., 2008Ramirez-Soriano A, Ramos-Onsins SE, Rozas J, Calafell F and Navarro A (2008) Statistical power analysis of neutrality tests under demographic expansions, contractions and bottlenecks with recombination. Genetics 179:555-567.). Additionally, to estimate possible changes in population size over time, Bayesian Skyline plots were estimated using BEAST. For this purpose, we used the mean substitution rates and their respective 95% credibility intervals estimated by the first round of BEAST analyses (see above) as a normal prior. The MCMC chain was run with 50,000,000 steps, sampling every 5,000 iterations after a discarded burn-in of 50,000 steps.

Results

Genetic diversity

We sequenced a total of 2,143 bp of mitochondrial DNA for 40 L. colocola and 28 L. tigrinus samples (ND5 = 567 bp, Cyt-b = 1028 bp, ATP8 = 133 bp, CR = 415 bp), and designated this alignment as Data set A (DSA). Additonally, we added to these data the shorter sequences reported by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68., corresponding to 19 haplotypes, so as to construct Data set B (DSB). The analyses with all segments concatenated led to the resolution of 68 haplotypes for the ingroup (L. colocola + L. tigrinus) in DSB, 58 of them being sampled only once, and 49 also being represented in DSA (Table 1; see description of haplotypes in Table S1). The concatenated data sets had high haplotypic and low nucleotide diversity, indicating a pattern of rapid and recent diversification. Interestingly, all 19 haplotypes identified in L. tigrinus samples were exclusive of that population, with no sharing with L. colocola individuals.

Table 1
Mitochondrial DNA diversity in Leopardus colocola and L. tigrinus. Diversity estimates are shown for each data set considered (DSA and DSB), and for each segment independently.

Phylogenetic analyses

All phylogenetic trees constructed with both data sets and both criteria (BI and ML) were congruent with respect to their main topological features. Therefore, only the results of the final analyses, using the relaxed Baysian approach implemented in BEAST, are shown (Figure 2). Haplotypes identified in all L. colocola and L. tigrinus were grouped into a monophyletic cluster with maximum probability based on both data sets. The TMRCAs estimated for this clade with DSA and DSB were very similar, with a mean ranging from 759 to 874 thousand years ago (kya), and 95% credibility intervals between 516 kya and 1.163 Mya. Three samples from central Brazil were placed in a basal cluster relative to all L. colocola and L. tigrinus haplotypes, corresponding to two individuals (bLti72 and bLti96) previously recognized as L. guttulus by Trigo et al. (2013)Trigo TC, Schneider A, de Oliveira TG, Lehugeur LM, Silveira L, Freitas TR and Eizirik E (2013) Molecular data reveal complex hybridization and a cryptic species of neotropical wild cat. Curr Biol 23:2528-2533., and one additional sample (bLti209), included in this study. The formation of this cluster, representing L. guttulus, supports the inference of a possible area of sympatry between this species and L. tigrinus in central Brazil.

Figure 2
Phylogenetic relationships among Leopardus colocola and L. tigrinus mitochondrial haplotypes, as assessed with dataset A (DSA) and dataset B (DSB), and depicted in Bayesian trees generated with BEAST. Insets depict each of the main nodes, with posterior probability (P) and node age in million years ago, with respective 95% credibility intervals. The five colors associated to L. colocola haplotypes are the same used in Figure 4 to highlight the five genetic groups identified in this species. The grey and orange colors indicate the haplotypes found only in L. tigrinus individuals.

Evidence of strong geographic structure was found in both DSA and DSB trees, highlighting the basal position of haplotypes sampled in western regions of South America, and the identification of a well-supported internal group containing all Brazilian and Uruguayan samples of L. colocola and all L. tigrinus (Figure 2). Brazilian and Uruguayan populations formed the most recent monophyletic cluster based on DSA, and the second based on DSB, with estimated TMRCA dating from 266 to 287 kya, with a 95% confidence interval of 164 – 406 kya. However, the two data sets resulted in different views of the phylogenetic relationships between this group and those found in the western portion of South America. DSA indicated reciprocal monophyly between western and eastern populations, while DSB rendered the western region paraphyletic in relation to eastern populations. Cossios et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68. also observed this same paraphyletic pattern, and considering that DSB includes a broader geographic representation of L. colocola genetic variation, we consider that this phylogenetic resolution is more plausible at the present time.

Within the Brazilian/Uruguayan cluster, two major clades could be recognized, each of them with an internal subdivision into two subgroups, leading to the identification of four different clusters. Clusters 1 and 3 (Figure 2) contain only haplotypes sampled in L. colocola, with the former including specimens from central and northeastern Brazil, in addition to one sample from Catamarca/Argentina and one sample of L. tigrinus from northeastern Brazil. Cluster 3, on the other hand, included all the haplotypes sampled in L. colocola individuals from southern Brazil and Uruguay. Haplotypes found in L. tigrinus were subdivided into Clusters 2 and 4, with the majority of L. tigrinus from northeastern Brazil being associated to Cluster 2 and L. tigrinus from central Brazil to Cluster 4 (Figure 2).

The estimated TMRCAs indicated that the divergence of haplotypes from central and northeastern Brazilian L. colocola occurred before the southern Brazilian and Uruguayan diversification, with a mean value of 92 kya for DSA and 104 kya for DSB in the first population, and 66 kya by both data sets for the second population. Divergence of haplotypes found in L. tigrinus seems to have occurred approximately at the same time, or shortly before it, with estimated dates ranging from 118 to 70 kya.

Haplotypes from western South America comprised the basal groups and were subdivided into several clusters: 5 and 6 for DSA and 5 – 9 for DSB. A detailed evaluation of DSB indicated that the most basal groups (7, 8 and 9) were restricted to areas in the southern portion of western South America (south of latitude 19º S), including Argentina, Chile and southern Bolivia. Cluster 6 was comprised uniquely by haplotypes sampled in the northern portion of western South America (north of latitude 19º S). Cluster 5 grouped the haplotypes most related to the eastern samples, and presented a mixed composition with individuals sampled in the northern and southern portions of western South America. In particular, this cluster contained samples from latitudes 17 – 25° S, in a partially intermediate geographic position between the northern and southern groups.

Haplotype relationships

The haplotype networks indicated a similar geographic structure to that observed in the phylogenetic analyses for eastern South America (SA) populations, with central and northeastern L. colocola segregated from southern Brazil and Uruguay, and also from L. tigrinus (Figure 3A,B). Interestingly, haplotypes found in L. tigrinus samples showed a more basal position in both networks in relation to those found in Brazilian and Uruguayan L. colocola. In the DSB network (calculated with complete deletion of sites with missing information; Figure 3B), the sequences contained in the groups of central and northeastern Brazil (including L. colocola and L. tigrinus specimens) had a star-shaped pattern, suggesting a possible demographic expansion, which could be connected to the inferred haplotype diversification.

Figure 3
Haplotype networks for mitochondrial DNA segments sampled in Leopardus colocola and L. tigrinus. The data consist of concatenated sequences from the mitochondrial ATP8, Cytb, Control Region and ND5 segments. Haplotypes are represented by circles whose size is proportional to their frequency. Lines on branches indicate the number of mutational steps between haplotypes; differences larger than 10 mutational steps are indicated by numbers. The top panel depicts the results obtained with data set A (DSA), encompassing longer sequences; the bottom panel depicts results based on data set B (DSB), which incorporates additional, shorter sequences reported by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68..

As also evidenced in the phylogenetic analyses, haplotypes from western SA appeared as the most basal lineages in the phylogeographic structure of L. colocola. For DSA, one haplotype originating from northern Chile (H49) was the most basal, while for DSB, the basal position was occupied mainly by haplotypes from southern portions of the Andes (below latitude 19° S, including Bolivia, Argentina and Chile).

Genetic structure

Genetic structure and gene flow analyses were only performed for DSB, due to its broader coverage of the L. colocola geographic distribution. The results from BAPS analyses performed with DSB were initially unstable and identified 4-5 genetic groups. In all of the five runs performed, two groups were stable and in agreement with the phylogenetic and network analyses, including mostly haplotypes sampled in eastern SA. Haplotypes from western SA were subdivided into 2 or 3 different groups, with an unstable allocation of individuals among different runs.

Considering that these samples comprised mainly the shorter sequences reported by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68., we decided to perform the same analyses with only the segments available for all samples (575 bp), in order to remove some possible noise induced by a large amount of missing data. This strategy led to stable results, with five groups identified with the same combination of haplotypes across all five runs: Group 1 (CNB), including all haplotypes from Clusters 1 and 2 (see Figure 2B) formed by central and northeastern Brazilian samples; Group 2 (SBU), comprising Clusters 3 and 4 with southern Brazilian and Uruguayan samples; Group 3 (SW), with haplotypes sampled in southwestern SA below latitude 19° S, and corresponding to Clusters 7 and 8 in Figure 2B; Group 4 (NW) with haplotypes from northwestern SA (above latitude 19° S), corresponding to Cluster 6, in addition to the two haplotypes from central Chile (H46 and H47), which formed Cluster 9 in the phylogenetic analyses; and Group 5 (CW), includind a mixture of haplotypes from the northern and southern parts of western SA (Cluster 5 in Figure 2B) being named here as the central-western population (Figure 4).

Figure 4
Map of South America showing the major genetic groups identified throughout the analyzed L. colocola distribution. The circles represent each sampling location, and the colors indicate the relative presence of haplotypes associated with each of the genetic groups identified with the BAPS analysis: Group 1 – central and north-eastern Brazilian L. colocola + L. tigrinus (brown); Group 2 – southern Brazilian and Uruguayan L. colocola + L. tigrinus (pink); Group 3 – south-western L. colocola (green); Group 4 – north-western L. colocola (dark blue); and Group 5 – central-western L. colocola (light blue). The arrows indicate the predominant direction of migration between populations based on analyses performed with the software LAMARC. Neotropical biomes are defined according to Olson et al. (2001)Olson DM, Dinerstein E, Wikramanayake ED, Burgess ND, Powell GVN, Underwood EC, D’Amico JA, Itoua I, Strand HE, Morrison JC, et al. (2001) Terrestrial ecoregions of the world: a new map of life on Earth. Bioscience 51:933-938..

Levels of genetic differentiation among these five groups were evaluated through ΦST indices. All resulting values were statistically significant and considered high, indicating a strong genetic differentiation between these clusters (Table 2). The highest ΦST values were obtained in comparisons between the two eastern populations (CNB and SBU) and two of the three western populations (NW and CW), with SW being the western group most closely related to the eastern groups. The lowest ΦST values were found, in general, in comparisons between different western groups, except for NW vs. CW. This was quite intriguing, given the geographic proximity between these groups, but the results obtained for the Mantel test analysis also reflected this pattern. In spite of significant correlations among genetic and geographic distance (full data set: r = 0.337, P = 0.000; eastern group: r = 0.276, P = 0.000; western group: r = 0.281, P = 0.000), the correlation was relatively low mainly due to the occurrence of haplotypes with higher genetic distance but very close geographic origin (see Supplemental Figure S1).

Table 2
Pairwise ΦST values between defined geographical populations for L. colocola.

Gene flow

Historical patterns of migration among populations were estimated for a scheme with only four populations. This included the groups identified with the BAPS analysis, with the exclusion of the CW group due to its small sample size. The haplotypes assigned to this group were allocated to the two other subpopulations of western SA according to their geographic origin in relation to latitude 19° S. Effective migration was estimated to be less than one migrant per generation, indicating limited dispersal and gene flow (Table 3). Two predominant directions of migration were observed using DSB, one from western to eastern regions of South America, and another from central and northeastern Brazil to southern Brazil and Uruguay (Table 3 and Figure 4). Estimates of migrant numbers yieded the highest values between NW and SW, CNB and SBU, and CNB and SW (Table 3).

Table 3
Estimation of migration rates between geographical populations of L. colocola based on mitochondrial DNA from data set B (DSB). Migration rate is scaled by mutation rate per site per generation. Nm is the estimated number of migrants entering a population per generation, and is obtained by multiplication of migration rates vs. theta for the receiving population. The left columns show the highest migration rates estimated for each pair of population, showing the predominant migration directions from western to eastern regions of South America, and from central and northeastern Brazil to southern Brazil and Uruguay.

Demographic history

Mismatch distribution analyses and neutrality tests were used to test the hypothesis of a recent population expansion in L. colocola. For this, we used only DSB. The mismatch distribution for the entire data set resulted in a bimodal graph, which would be consistent with a heterogeneous genetic composition of the data set. The analyses conducted with western and eastern regions independently revealed a unimodal pattern (although slighly irregular) only for the former, with a mode around 30 differences suggesting a rapid and relatively old population expansion (see Figure S2). On the other hand, Fu’s FS neutrality test resulted in negative and significant values for both populations analyzed independently and also for the entire data set (entire data set: -24.11; eastern: -15.91; western: -11.17; p < 0.05), indicating possible events of demographic expansion in all the assessed data sets.

The Bayesian Skyline plot showed a constant population size until about 300 kya, with a strong signal of population expansion in recent times. For western SA, we observed a strong signal of population expansion starting around 200 kya (Figure 5A). On the other hand, for the eastern SA group, a more recent signal of demographic expansion was detected around 60 – 50 kya (Figure 5B).

Figure 5
Bayesian skyline plot showing the effective population size fluctuation of L. colocola through time. (A) Analysis performed with all haplotypes from western South America and (B) Analysis performed with all haplotypes from eastern South America.

Discussion

Phylogenetic relationships and genetic structure

Mitochondrial analyses revealed a strong genetic structure across the L. colocola distribution, in agreement with previous studies of this species (Johnson et al., 1999Johnson WE, Pecon-Slattery J, Eizirik E, Kim J, Menotti-Raymond M, Bonacic C, Cambre R, Crawshaw P, Nunes A, Seuánez HN, et al. (1999) Disparate phylogeography patterns of molecular genetic variation in four closely related South American small cat species. Mol Ecol 8:S79-S94.; Napolitano et al., 2008Napolitano C, Bennett M, Johnson WE, O’Brien SJ, Marquet PA, Barría I, Poulin E and Iriarte A (2008) Ecological and biogeographical inferences on two sympatric and enigmatic Andean cat species using genetic identification of faecal samples. Mol Ecol 17:678-690.; Cossíos et al., 2009Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68.). Several monophyletic clusters were identified in the phylogenetic analyses, in strong concordance with the groups found by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68. for the central Andes. According to the BAPS analyses, these clusters could be joined into five main genetic groups distributed in west-east and north-south directions. However, these lineages were not completely allopatric, given the co-occurrence of unrelated haplotypes at some localities, mainly in central South America (see Figure 4), as was also reported by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68. and Napolitano et al. (2008)Napolitano C, Bennett M, Johnson WE, O’Brien SJ, Marquet PA, Barría I, Poulin E and Iriarte A (2008) Ecological and biogeographical inferences on two sympatric and enigmatic Andean cat species using genetic identification of faecal samples. Mol Ecol 17:678-690.. This pattern suggests that this particular region presents a more complex history that favored events of longstanding isolation with posterior contact between different populations at different times during the evolution of this species.

Historical connections between the western and eastern portions of the pampas cat distribution seem to have mainly occurred via southern populations of the west. Migration analyses indicated that the highest effective migration occurred from western to eastern populations, especially to central and north-eastern Brazil, probably taking the diagonal dry corridor formed by the interconnection of three tropical/subtropical open biomes: Caatinga (a seasonally dry tropical forest in northeastern Brazil), Cerrado (central Brazilian savanna), and Chaco (in northeastern Argentina, western Paraguay and south-eastern Bolivia) (Werneck, 2011Werneck FP (2011) The diversification of eastern South American open vegetation biomes: historical biogeography and perspectives. Quat Sci Rev 30:1630-1648.). Several studies document the importance of this biome connection to the migration and gene flow of open-habitat vertebrates (Werneck et al., 2012Werneck FP, Gamble T, Colli GR, Rodrigues MT and Sites Jr JW (2012) Deep diversification and long-term persistence in the South American “Dry Diagonal”: integrating continent-wide phylogeography and distribution modeling of geckos. Evolution 66:3014-3034. and references therein), and our data suggest that this region may have been important for the establishment of the historical relationships between western and eastern pampas cat populations. A high migration rate was also estimated for the eastern portion of South America, from central/northeastern Brazil to southeastern Brazil/Uruguay. In the past, this historical migration could be favored during glacial periods associated with the reduction of forested environments (Behling, 1998Behling H (1998) Late Quaternary vegetational and climatic changes in Brazil. Rev Palaeobot Palynol 99:143-156., 2002Behling H (2002) South and Southeast Brazilian grasslands during Late Quaternary times: A synthesis. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 177:19-27.) that subsequently have likely isolated these two populations.

In spite of the migration results, recent gene flow between the five lineages identified here seems to be relatively low, taking into account their high genetic differentiation, especially between eastern and western regions of South America. In fact, although haplotype co-occurrence was identified at some localities, the five lineages identified here were almost completely segregated geographically.

Among the three major groups identified in western South America, the northwestern one was mainly associated to the Montane Grasslands of Peru and northern Bolivia, while the southwestern one was documented in a variety of biomes, including the temperate grasslands (Patagonian Steppe), Mediterranean Forests and Montane grasslands of Argentina, southern Bolivia and Chile. The boundary between these two populations apparently lies around parallel 18-19° S as was also documented by Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68.. The third group (central-western) was identified around 17° – 25° S, at an intermediate position between the former two populations, in a transitional zone between highland steppes to dry forested lowlands (Garcia-Perea, 1994Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36.).

The latitudes comprising the central-western population and the limit between the occurrence of the north and southwestern ones, approximately correspond to a specific dry subtropical region of the Andes, known as the “dry diagonal” (Ammann et al., 2001Ammann C, Jenny B, Kammer K and Messerli B (2001) Late Quaternary Glacier response to humidity changes in the arid Andes of Chile (18-29oS). Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 172:313-326.; Kull et al., 2002Kull C, Grosjean M and Veit H (2002) Modeling modern and late Pleistocene glacio-climatological conditions in the north Chilean Andes (29-30oS). Clim Change 52:359-381.). According to those authors, this area is characterized by extremely dry conditions and constitutes a transitional zone between two circulation systems found in South America, which have specific impacts on the climate of this area, leading to a northern region with higher precipitation and a southern region with low precipitation. These different local environmental conditions in the north and south, an also inside the dry diagonal, may have favored the evolution of differently adapted forms. In fact, this region has already been suggested to have played an important role in determining the genetic structure of other Andean species, such as the vicuña (Vicugna vicugna) (Marín et al., 2007Marín JC, Casey CS, Kadwell M, Yaya K, Hoces D, Olazabal J, Rosadio R, Rodriguez J, Spotorno A, Bruford MW, et al. (2007) Mitochondrial phylogeography and demographic history of the Vicuña: implications for conservation. Heredity 99:70-80.). Interestingly, genetic differentiation found between the north and southwestern populations was lower than those found between these same populations and the central-western group that seems to be geographically closer. This pattern might indicate that some historical gene flow was present between the northern and southern populations along the Andes, with longer periods of isolation relative to the central-western population.

In eastern regions of pampas cat occurrence, the two identified populations were also subdivided according to different biomes. Northern populations are restricted to two Brazilian biomes, Pantanal (humid grasslands connected to the Chaco biome [although there is no evidence of L. colocolo in the Chaco – Cuellar et al., 2006Cuellar E, Maffei L, Arispe R and Noss A (2006) Geoffroy’s cats at the northern limit of their range: activity patterns and density estimates from camera trapping in Bolivian dry forests. Stud Neotrop Fauna Environ 41:169-177., Lucherini et al., 2016Lucherini M, Eizirik E, de Oliveira T, Pereira J and Williams RSR (2016) Leopardus colocolo. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016:e.T15309A97204446.]) and Cerrado, while southern populations are restricted to the Pampas steppes of southern Brazil, Uruguay e northeastern Argentina. Although higher values of genetic differentiation were generally found between eastern and western populations, the genetic differentiation found between these eastern lineages was also quite high. In fact, no haplotype found in L. colocola specimens was shared or found in sympatry between these two populations (exceptions included only the haplotypes found in L. tigrinus individuals who carried some haplotypes from the southern group).

Probably the gene flow between these two populations was interrupted by the return of forested environments in Brazil around 17 kya in the Late Pleistocene (Ledru et al., 1996Ledru M, Braga PIS, Soubiès F, Fournier M, Martin L, Suguio K and Turcq B (1996) The last 50,000 years in the Neotropics (Southern Brazil): Evolution of vegetation and climate. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 123:239-257.). In addition, the southeastern population restricted to the Pampas biome seems to be the most isolated unit under present conditions. No geographic population shared any haplotype with this unit, and despite its geographic proximity to the southwestern group, a high genetic differentiation was found between these populations. Although the absence of haplotype sharing with other regions could be only due to a sampling artifact, current geographic conditions contribute to the interpretation of an isolated population, including several possible geographical barriers, such as the Atlantic Forest on the north, the Uruguay, Paraguay and Paraná rivers on the west and La Plata River on the south.

Finally, our data corroborate those reported by Johnson et al. (1999)Johnson WE, Pecon-Slattery J, Eizirik E, Kim J, Menotti-Raymond M, Bonacic C, Cambre R, Crawshaw P, Nunes A, Seuánez HN, et al. (1999) Disparate phylogeography patterns of molecular genetic variation in four closely related South American small cat species. Mol Ecol 8:S79-S94., by indicating that the Andean region may not present a strong barrier to this species, since haplotypes from the same lineage/group were found on both sides of the Cordillera. This is not necessarily surprising, since the Andean Cordillera seems also not to be an effective barrier to gene flow even for some small rodents (e.g., Smith et al., 2001Smith MF, Kelt DA and Patton JL (2001) Testing models of diversification in mice in the Abrothrix olivaceus/xanthorhinus complex in Chile and Argentina. Mol Ecol 10:397-405.; Palma et al., 2005Palma RE, Marquet PA and Boric-Bargetto D (2005) Inter-and intraspecific phylogeography of small mammals in the Atacama Desert and adjacent areas of northern Chile. J Biogeogr 32:1931-1941.; Rodriguez-Serrano et al., 2006Rodriguez-Serrano E, Cancino RA and Palma RE (2006) Molecular phylogeography of Abrothrix olivaceus (Rodentia: Sigmodontinae) in Chile. J Mammal 87:971-980.; Cañón et al., 2010Cañón C, D’Elia G, Pardinas UFJ and Lessa EP (2010) Phylogeography of Loxodontomys micropus with comments on the alpha taxonomy of Loxodontomys (Cricetidae: Sigmodontinae). J Mammal 91:1449-1458.). On the other hand, the Paraná River, a tributary of the Plata River Basin, seems to be a more effective barrier for L. colocola, as it is for other large mammals, such as the marsh deer Blastocerus dichotomus (Márquez et al., 2006Márquez A, Maldonado JE, González S, Beccaceci MD, Garcia JE and Duarte JMB (2006) Phylogeography and Pleistocene demographic history of the endangered marsh deer (Blastocerus dichotomus) from the Rio de la Plata Basin. Conserv Genet 7:563-575.).

Demographic history and hybridization/introgression with L. tigrinus

Two episodes of demographic expansion were detected by our analyses: one older in western South America (around 200 kya), and one more recent in eastern SA (60-50 kya). These episodes were supported by the skyline plots and neutrality tests, even though they were not as visible in the mismatch distribution analyses. This latter result could be attributed to an insufficient sampling, or a more complex demography history in addition to a simple event of population expansion. In fact, the haplotype networks depicted few cases consistent with an expansion pattern, indicating a more complex history of pampas cat populations. The estimated ages for these demographic events, in addition to the results gleaned from the networks, phylogenetic and migration rate analyses, support the inference that ancestral haplotypes from pampas cat occurred in western South America, especially in the southwestern portion of the continent. Nevertheless, additional evidence from the haplotype networks illustrate the complexity of pampas cat mtDNA history, with lineages/groups found in the north and central-west areas apparently derived from those found in central Brazil. This phylogeographic pattern suggests a demographic colonization from southwestern to central Brazil, possibly via the dry corridor, with a posterior colonization of the western regions in the northern part of the continent.

The estimated age for both events of population expansion were coincident with two independent Pleistocene colder periods (Ehlers and Gibbard, 2007Ehlers J and Gibbard PL (2007) The extent and chronology of Cenozoic Global Glaciation. Quatern Int 164-165:6-20.). This Quaternary epoch seems to play an important role in the biogeographic pattern of several organisms, mainly due to the strong climatic fluctuations inferred for that time, with important consequences on environment conditions (Hewitt, 1996Hewitt GM (1996) Some genetic consequences of ice ages, and their role in divergence and speciation. Biol J Linnean Soc 58:247-276., 2001Hewitt GM (2001) Speciation, hybrid zones and phylogeography - or seeing genes in space and time. Mol Ecol 10:537-549., 2004Hewitt GM (2004) Genetic consequences of climatic oscillations in the Quaternary. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 359:183-195.). In general, interglacial periods characterized by more humid and warmer conditions were associated with demographic expansion of forest-adapted species. However, the association of colder and drier conditions of the glacial periods with demographic expansion of open-habitat organism is not so clear, with different species presenting variable responses to these climatic oscilations (Turchetto-Zolet et al., 2013Turchetto-Zolet AC, Pinheiro F, Salgueiro F and Palma-Silva C (2013) Phylogeographical patterns shed light on evolutionary process in South America. Mol Ecol 22:1193-1213.).

In Brazil, the age of the most recent expansion inferred for L. colocola is coincident with a colder and drier period in the country, which was associated with a retraction of forested environments and expansion of subtropical grasslands (Ledru et al., 1996Ledru M, Braga PIS, Soubiès F, Fournier M, Martin L, Suguio K and Turcq B (1996) The last 50,000 years in the Neotropics (Southern Brazil): Evolution of vegetation and climate. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 123:239-257., Behling, 1998Behling H (1998) Late Quaternary vegetational and climatic changes in Brazil. Rev Palaeobot Palynol 99:143-156., 2002Behling H (2002) South and Southeast Brazilian grasslands during Late Quaternary times: A synthesis. Palaeogeogr Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 177:19-27.). Additionally, some studies have also demonstrated a possible correlation between grassland expansions favored in glacial periods and geographic movements of open-habitat plants (Jakob et al., 2009Jakob SS, Martinez-Meyer E and Blattner FR (2009) Phylogeographic analyses and paleodistribution modeling indicate Pleistocene in situ survival of Hordeum species (Poaceae) in southern patagonia without genetic or spatial restriction. Mol Biol Evol 26:907-923.; Cosacov et al., 2010Cosacov A, Sersic AN, Sosa V, Johnson LA and Cocucci AA (2010) Multiple periglacial refugia in the Patagonian steppe and post-glacial colonization of the Andes: the phylogeography of Calceolaria polyrhiza. J Biogeogr 37:1463-1477.) and animals (Wüster et al., 2005Wüster W, Ferguson JE, Quijada-Mascarenas JA, Pook CE, Salomão MG and Thorpe RS (2005) Tracing an invasion: landbridges, refugia, and the phylogeography of the Neotropical rattlesnake (Serpentes: Viperidae: Crotalus durissus). Mol Ecol 14:1095-1108.; Marín et al., 2007Marín JC, Casey CS, Kadwell M, Yaya K, Hoces D, Olazabal J, Rosadio R, Rodriguez J, Spotorno A, Bruford MW, et al. (2007) Mitochondrial phylogeography and demographic history of the Vicuña: implications for conservation. Heredity 99:70-80.; Prado et al., 2012Prado CPA, Haddad CFB and Zamudio KR (2012) Cryptic lineages and Pleistocene population expansion in a Brazilian Cerrado frog. Mol Ecol 21:921-941.). Therefore, we conclude that this open-habitat cat may have expanded its geographic distribution into previously unavailable areas, following the estabilishment of more open habitats.

The demographic history of L. colocola became even more complex when we examined the haplotypes found in L. tigrinus individuals. Interestingly, these haplotypes seem to be ancestral to those currently found in L. colocola from Brazil, Uruguay and north and central-western populations, thus constituting an important record of the evolutionary history of this species. This pattern, in addition to the absence of haplotype sharing between L. tigrinus and L. colocola individuals, is highly intriguing and suggests that the introgression process from the latter species into L. tigrinus is quite old. The recognition of an ancient process would explain the intermediate position of L. tigrinus haplotypes, indicating that introgression events occurred before the geographic expansion and differentiation of eastern populations. In fact, according to our estimated dates, the diversification of L. colocola haplotypes from eastern South America occurred at a similar time as the diversification of L. tigrinus haplotypes (mean values around 118 – 70 kya for L. tigrinus and 100 – 60 kya for L. colocola). Therefore, we postulate that hybridization/introgression events occurred in central Brazil soon after the colonization of eastern South America, thus being connected with the first demographic expansion detected in this study. The L. colocola haplotypes present in the individuals that arrived in eastern SA seem to remain only (likely bearing additional mutations) in the L. tigrinus population, and may have become extinct in the current eastern populations of L. colocola.

Whether hybridization between L. tigrinus and L. colocola, leading to complete mitochondrial introgression into the former species, occurred before, during, or after the divergence of L. tigrinus and L. guttulus is still uncertain. Available estimates for divergence of these species are 103 kya – 1.038 Mya (Trigo et al., 2013Trigo TC, Schneider A, de Oliveira TG, Lehugeur LM, Silveira L, Freitas TR and Eizirik E (2013) Molecular data reveal complex hybridization and a cryptic species of neotropical wild cat. Curr Biol 23:2528-2533.). This estimation would indicate that L. tigrinus and L. guttulus diverged before the introgression from L. colocola into the former. However, this estimate was obtained based on only two introns of the Y chromosome containing few variable sites, leading to an extremely broad confidence interval. Considering the minimum value (103 kya), hybridization and introgession from L. colocola could have occurred at an early stage of the divergence between the two tigrina species, and thus could have played a role in this divergence process.

Taxonomic considerations

Three distinct species have been proposed for the pampas cat by Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36.: Leopardus colocolo, Leopardus pajeros and L. braccatus. This proposed classification was followed by Wozencraft (2005)Wozencraft WC (2005) Carnivora, in: Wilson DE and Reeder DM (eds) Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, pp 532-628. and extended by Nascimento (2010, Doctoral thesis, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo). Previous molecular studies (Johnson et al., 1999Johnson WE, Pecon-Slattery J, Eizirik E, Kim J, Menotti-Raymond M, Bonacic C, Cambre R, Crawshaw P, Nunes A, Seuánez HN, et al. (1999) Disparate phylogeography patterns of molecular genetic variation in four closely related South American small cat species. Mol Ecol 8:S79-S94.; Napolitano et al., 2008Napolitano C, Bennett M, Johnson WE, O’Brien SJ, Marquet PA, Barría I, Poulin E and Iriarte A (2008) Ecological and biogeographical inferences on two sympatric and enigmatic Andean cat species using genetic identification of faecal samples. Mol Ecol 17:678-690.; Cossios et al., 2009Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68.) did observe strong population structure but did not find support for this species-level categorization, given the recent estimated age of the inferred phylogroups. These earlier molecular studies were based on limited geographic coverage, which in some cases precluded a more comprehensive comparison with the morphological proposals. Given the broader sampling we achieved in the present study, we attempt here an extended comparison with specific and subspecific categories proposed for the pampas cat group.

L. colocolo recognized by Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36. was subdivided into two subspecies: L. c. wolffsohni from the highland steppes of northern Chile and L. c. colocolo from forests of central Chile. According to our results, samples collected in northern Chile harbored a haplotype that is clearly connected to populations found in the southwestern region on the eastern slope of the Andes, in a group that is recognized as L. pajeros by Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36.. In addition, Cossíos et al. (2009)Cossíos D, Lucherini M, Ruiz-García M and Angers B (2009) Influence of ancient glacial periods on the Andean fauna: The case of the pampas cat (Leopardus colocolo). BMC Evol Biol 9:68. demonstrated that sequences obtained by Napolitano et al. (2008)Napolitano C, Bennett M, Johnson WE, O’Brien SJ, Marquet PA, Barría I, Poulin E and Iriarte A (2008) Ecological and biogeographical inferences on two sympatric and enigmatic Andean cat species using genetic identification of faecal samples. Mol Ecol 17:678-690. for northern Chile form a clear monophyletic group with haplotypes representing the central-western population identified by our data. These findings indicate that the population in northern Chile, in spite of the Andean Cordillera, is closely related to pampas cat from the eastern Andes, thus not supporting its recognizition as a distinct species.

On the other hand, samples evaluated here from central Chile, corresponding to L. c. colocolo, present more complex relationships. While one sample was clearly associated to the southwestern group, in a pattern similar to that obtained from northern Chile across all analyses, two other samples were more closely assigned to southern or northwestern populations, depending on the analysis performed. These results indicate a more unstable position of this population, requiring a larger sample to define its phylogenetic position more precisely.

For L. pajeros, seven subspecies were recognized by Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36., although the author herself recognized that only three groups (northern, central and southern) could be found along this taxon’s geographic distribution, taking into account habitat and morphological similarities. The northern portion of the L. pajeros distribution was represented by three subspecies: L. p. thomasi from Ecuador, L. p. garleppi from Peru and L. p. steinbachi from Bolivia. Unfortunately, we did not have access to samples representing L. p. thomasi and L. p. steinbachi, but the geographic distribution of L. p. garleppi is in great concordance with the northwestern group identified here, with only a proposed extension of this distribution to regions of northwestern Bolivia. According to Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36., L. p. thomasi and L. p. garleppi have similar pelage patterns and cranial morphology and occurr in the same habitats, and could thus be assigned to the same geographic population. L. p. steinbachi presents only slight morphological differences from L. p. garlepii, and given its geographic proximity to the limit of the northwestern group found in this study, this taxon might also be a synonym of garleppi.

The central and southern distribution of L. pajeros includes the subspecies L. p. budini and L. p. crespoi from montaneous areas of northwestern Argentina, L. p. pajeros from central Argentina with a possible boundary in the Pampa Province of Argentina, around latitude 38°S, and L. p. crucinus from southern Chile and Argentina. L. p. crespoi is only known from the type specimen and Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36. considered that this may be a synonym of L. p. budini due to morphological and habitat similarities. The geographic distribution of these two subspecies approximates the central-western population identified in our study, in a transitional area between highland steppes and lowland dry forests. The geographic distribution of L. p. pajeros strongly corresponds to the southern group found in our analyses, with only an extension of its distribution over that which would be recognized as L. p. crucinus, approximately around latitude 41° S. However, additional sampling from areas south of this area would be important to evaluate the existence of an additional subspecies in southernmost Argentina and Chile.

The eastern populations of pampas cat were subdivided by Garcia-Perea (1994)Garcia-Perea R (1994) The Pampas Cat Group (Genus Lynchailurus Severtzov, 1858) (Carnivora: Felidae), a systematic and biogeographic review. Am Mus Novit 3096:1-36. into two subspecies of L. braccatus: L. b. braccatus for Central Brazil and L. b. munoai for southern Brazil, Uruguay and northeastern Argentina. According to that author, morphological differences in skulls are not clear for these subspecies, but there are relevant distinctions in coat pattern and body size. In agreement with this view, our results indicate a strong genetic differentiation between these populations, indicating that they consist of two separate evolutionary units.

Overall, our study allowed the identification of at least five genetic groups in L. colocola, which were largely consistent with currently recognized subspecies (Kitchener et al., 2017Kitchener AC, Breitenmoser-Würsten C, Eizirik E, Gentry A, Werdelin L, Wilting A, Yamaguchi N, Abramov AV, Christiansen P, Driscoll C, et al. (2017) A revised taxonomy of the Felidae. The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group. Cat News Special Issue 11, 80 pp.). This organization is also mostly in agreement with the results obtained by Nascimento (2010, Doctoral thesis, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo), although that author considered all these populations to represent distinct species. Based on our data, the pampas cat can so far be viewed conservatively as a complex species with marked population structure across its range. The evolutionary history of this cat seems to have been defined by vicariant isolation of lineages during lengthy periods, followed by population expansion into new habitats or into previously inhabited areas, leading to new secondary contact zones and the complex genetic patterns observed here. Additional analyses, integrating mitochondrial and nuclear data, as well as detailed morphological and ecological information, will be required to further assess the hypothesis that these regional pampas cat populations have achieved species-level distinctiveness. Regardless of the ultimate resolution of this taxonomic discussion, for conservation purposes these regional populations should be considered distinct Evolutionarily Significant Units (ESUs), and thus be the focus of separate assessment and management actions.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank all the people and institutiuons listed on Table S1 for providing access to biological samples analyzed in this study. We also thank Cladinara R. Sarturi, Priscilla M. Zamberlan and José Ricardo S. Barradas for techincal assistance. This study was supported by Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico – CNPq/Brazil and by Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado do Rio Grande do Sul – FAPERGS/Brazil.

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Internet Resources

  • Associate Editor: Loreta B. Freitas

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    2018

History

  • Received
    03 Apr 2017
  • Accepted
    07 June 2017
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