TY - JOUR
T1 - Coexisting With Humans
T2 - Genomic and Behavioral Consequences in a Small and Isolated Bear Population
AU - Fabbri, Giulia
AU - Biello, Roberto
AU - Gabrielli, Maëva
AU - Torres Vilaça, Sibelle
AU - Sammarco, Beatrice
AU - Fuselli, Silvia
AU - Santos, Patrícia
AU - Ancona, Lorena
AU - Peretto, Laura
AU - Padovani, Giada
AU - Sollitto, Marco
AU - Iannucci, Alessio
AU - Paule, Ladislav
AU - Balestra, Dario
AU - Gerdol, Marco
AU - Ciofi, Claudio
AU - Ciucci, Paolo
AU - Mahan, Carolyn G.
AU - Trucchi, Emiliano
AU - Benazzo, Andrea
AU - Bertorelle, Giorgio
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.
PY - 2025/12/1
Y1 - 2025/12/1
N2 - Climate and land use change have increased human–wildlife interactions, potentially reducing wild species density and prompting behavioral adaptations to urbanized environments. It is still debated if behavioral responses are mainly the result of phenotypic plasticity or if they were driven by anthropic selective pressures, especially in small populations where genetic drift is strong. Our study focused on the small Apennine brown bear population (Ursus arctos marsicanus), which has coexisted with humans in Central Italy for millennia. We characterized genomic diversity and identified adaptation signals distinctive to this population by comparing newly generated and published whole-genome resequencing data from Apennine, Central European, and North American brown bears. Apennine brown bears exhibited reduced genomic diversity, higher inbreeding, and larger realized genetic load compared to other brown bears. We showed that Apennine brown bears possess a unique genomic diversity pattern including selective signatures at genes associated with reduced aggressiveness (eg DCC, SLC13A5). Within these genes, most of the newly discovered variants were located in noncoding regions and some of them were predicted to alter splicing factor binding sites, highlighting the contribution of noncoding variation in shaping complex phenotypes. Our results support the hypothesis that human-induced selection has promoted behavioral changes even in small- and long-isolated populations, reducing conflicts and contributing to the long-term persistence of a large mammal species and its coexistence with humans.
AB - Climate and land use change have increased human–wildlife interactions, potentially reducing wild species density and prompting behavioral adaptations to urbanized environments. It is still debated if behavioral responses are mainly the result of phenotypic plasticity or if they were driven by anthropic selective pressures, especially in small populations where genetic drift is strong. Our study focused on the small Apennine brown bear population (Ursus arctos marsicanus), which has coexisted with humans in Central Italy for millennia. We characterized genomic diversity and identified adaptation signals distinctive to this population by comparing newly generated and published whole-genome resequencing data from Apennine, Central European, and North American brown bears. Apennine brown bears exhibited reduced genomic diversity, higher inbreeding, and larger realized genetic load compared to other brown bears. We showed that Apennine brown bears possess a unique genomic diversity pattern including selective signatures at genes associated with reduced aggressiveness (eg DCC, SLC13A5). Within these genes, most of the newly discovered variants were located in noncoding regions and some of them were predicted to alter splicing factor binding sites, highlighting the contribution of noncoding variation in shaping complex phenotypes. Our results support the hypothesis that human-induced selection has promoted behavioral changes even in small- and long-isolated populations, reducing conflicts and contributing to the long-term persistence of a large mammal species and its coexistence with humans.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024748550
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024748550#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1093/molbev/msaf292
DO - 10.1093/molbev/msaf292
M3 - Article
C2 - 41392451
AN - SCOPUS:105024748550
SN - 0737-4038
VL - 42
JO - Molecular biology and evolution
JF - Molecular biology and evolution
IS - 12
M1 - msaf292
ER -