Molecular tracking and prevalence of the red colour morph restricted to
a harvested leopard population in South Africa
Abstract
The red leopard (Panthera pardus) colour morph is a colour variant that
occurs only in South Africa, where it is confined to the Central
Bushveld bioregion. Red leopards have been spreading over the past 40
years, which raises the speculation that the prevalence of this
phenotype is related to low dispersal of young individuals owing to high
off-take in the region. Intensive selective hunting tends to remove
large resident males from the breeding population, which gives young
males the chance to mate with resident females that are more likely to
be their relatives, eventually increasing the frequency of rare genetic
variants. To investigate the genetic mechanisms underlying the red coat
colour morph in leopards, and whether its prevalence in South Africa
relates to an increase in genetic relatedness in the population, we
sequenced exons of six colour coat associated genes and 20
microsatellite loci in twenty wild-type and four red leopards. The
results were combined with demographic data available from our study
sites. We found that red leopards own a haplotype in homozygosity
identified by one non-synonymous SNP and a 1 bp deletion that causes a
frameshift in the Tyrosinase Related Protein 1 (TYRP1), a gene known to
be involved in the biosynthesis of melanin. Microsatellite analyses
indicate clear signs of a population bottleneck and a relatedness of
0.11 among all pairwise relationships, eventually supporting our
hypothesis that a rare colour morph in the wild has increased its local
frequency due to low natal dispersal. This was backed by a high
human-induced mortality rate (40%).