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    Genome-wide Evidence Reveals that African and Eurasian Golden Jackals Are Distinct Species
    with K. P. Koepfli, J. Pollinger, R. Godinho, J. Robinson, A. Lea, S. Hendricks, R. M. Schweizer, O. Thalmann, P. Silva, Z. Fan, A. A. Yurchenko, P. Dobrynin, A. Makunin, B. Shapiro, F. Álvares, J. C. Brito, E. Geffen, J. A. Leonard, K. M. Helgen, W. E. Johnson, S. J. O'Brien, B. VanValkenburgh, and Wayne R. K.
    © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. The golden jackal of Africa has long been considered a conspecific of jackals distributed throughout Eurasia, with the nearest source populations in the Middle East. However, two recent reports found that mitochondrial haplotypes of some African golden jackals aligned more closely to gray wolves [1, 2], which is surprising giventhe absence of gray wolves in Africa and the phenotypic divergence between the two species. Moreover, these results imply the existence of a previous…Read more
  • Genomic evidence of geographically widespread effect of gene flow from polar bears into brown bears
    with I. Stirling, L. Kistler, R. Salamzade, E. Ersmark, T. L. Fulton, M. Stiller, R. E. Green, and B. Shapiro
    © 2014 The Authors. Molecular Ecology Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Polar bears are an arctic, marine adapted species that is closely related to brown bears. Genome analyses have shown that polar bears are distinct and genetically homogeneous in comparison to brown bears. However, these analyses have also revealed a remarkable episode of polar bear gene flow into the population of brown bears that colonized the Admiralty, Baranof and Chichagof islands of Alaska. Here, we present an analysi…Read more