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Dryad

Ancient bears provide insights into Pleistocene ice age refugia in Southeast Alaska

Cite this dataset

da Silva Coelho, Flavio Augusto et al. (2023). Ancient bears provide insights into Pleistocene ice age refugia in Southeast Alaska [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.brv15dvdk

Abstract

During the Late Pleistocene, major parts of North America were periodically covered by ice sheets. However, there are still questions about whether ice-free refugia were present in the Alexander Archipelago along the Southeast (SE) Alaska coast during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). Numerous subfossils have been recovered from caves in SE Alaska, including American black (Ursus americanus) and brown (U. arctos) bears, which today are found in the Alexander Archipelago but are genetically distinct from mainland bear populations. Hence, these bear species offer an ideal system to investigate long-term occupation, potential refugial survival, and lineage turnover. Here we present genetic analyses based on 99 new complete mitochondrial genomes from ancient and modern brown and black bears spanning the last ~45,000 years. Black bears form two SE Alaskan subclades that diverged >100,00 years ago, one preglacial and one postglacial. All postglacial ancient brown bears are closely related to modern brown bears  in the archipelago, while a single preglacial brown bear is found in a distantly related clade. A hiatus in the bear subfossil record around the LGM and the deep split of their pre- and post-glacial subclades fail to support a hypothesis of continuous occupancy in SE Alaska throughout the LGM for either species. Our results are consistent with an absence of refugia along the SE Alaska coast but indicate that vegetation quickly expanded after deglaciation, allowing bears to recolonize the area after a short-lived LGM peak.

Funding

National Science Foundation, Award: DEB 1556565

National Science Foundation, Award: EAR 1854550

National Science Foundation, Award: EAR 9870343

National Science Foundation, Award: EAR 0208247

National Geographic Society, Award: 6212-98