J Syst Evol

• Research Article •    

High genetic load and recent anthropogenic bottleneck in the endangered Cupressus austrotibetica (Cupressaceae), Asia's tallest tree

Heng Yang1,2†, Jialiang Li1,2†, Mi Yoon Chung3, Myong Gi Chung4, Zhitong Han1, Dayu Wu1, Jingge Kuang1, Xinran Zhang1, Xi Zhou1, Linning Bai1, Jianquan Liu1,5*, Jian Luo6*, and Kangshan Mao1,2,7*   

  1. 1Key Laboratory of Bio‐Resource and Eco‐Environment of Ministry of Education, Chengdu Botanical Garden‐Sichuan University Joint Laboratoryfor Ex Situ Conservation and Resource Utilization of Mountain Plants, College of Life Sciences, State Key Laboratory of Hydraulics andMountain River Engineering, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610064, China

    2Chengdu Botanical Garden, Chengdu 610503, China

    3Department of Biological Sciences, Chungnam National University, Daejeon 34134, Republic of Korea

    4Division of Life Science, Gyeongsang National University, Jinju 52828, Republic of Korea

    5State Key Laboratory of Herbage Innovation and Grassland Agro‐Ecosystem, College of Ecology, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou 730000, China

    6Xizang Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology in Plateau Area of Ministry of Education, Research Institute of Xizang Plateau Ecology, National KeyStation of Field Scientific Observation & Experiment of Alpine Forest Ecology System in Nyingchi, Xizang Agriculture & Animal HusbandryUniversity, Nyingchi 860000, China

    7School of Ecology and Environment, Xizang University, Lhasa 850000, China†These authors contributed equally to this work.

    *Authors for correspondence. Jianquan Liu. E‐mail: liujq@nwipb.ac.cn; Jian Luo. E‐mail: luojian@xza.edu.cn; Kangshan Mao. E‐mail:maokangshan@163.com

  • Received:2025-05-15 Accepted:2025-09-22 Online:2025-11-28 Published:2025-10-10
  • Supported by:
    This research received equal funding from the Science and Technology Major Project of Xizang (XZ202402ZD0005) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC, U20A2080 and 32300194), with additional support from the China Post-doctoral Science Foundation (BX20230241 and 2024M752196), Sichuan University Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (SCU2024D003, SCU2023D003, 2023SCU12108), the Institutional Research Fund from Sichuan University (2021SCUNL102), and the Qinghai Provincial Central Government Guides Local Funds for Science and Technology Development (2024ZY005).

Abstract: Understanding the genetic diversity and genetic load of endangered species is essential for developing effective conservation strategies, particularly in ecologically sensitive regions such as the Himalayas. Cupressus austrotibetica, a rare conifer and the tallest recorded tree in Asia, reaching up to 101.2 m, faces substantial anthropogenic and environmental threats. To evaluate its genetic status, we sequenced transcriptomes of 54 individuals sampled across its restricted range and compared them with 96 individuals of C. gigantea, a closely related endangered species with broader distribution at higher elevations. Our analysis reveals that C. austrotibetica exhibits higher genetic diversity (π = 0.0091) compared to C. gigantea (π = 0.0042). Demographic analyses identified three historical bottleneck events in C. austrotibetica and two in C. gigantea, with two of these events coinciding with Quaternary climatic oscillations. Despite its relatively high genetic diversity, C. austrotibetica has a smaller effective population size based on Stairway Plot 2 (Ne ≈ 7200) than C. gigantea (Ne ≈ 17 600). Furthermore, C. austrotibetica harbors a higher proportion of severe deleterious mutations, while C. gigantea retains more moderate deleterious variants. These findings indicate that a recent anthropogenic bottleneck event has likely driven the reduced population size and increased genetic load in C. austrotibetica, emphasizing the urgent need for conservation priorities for this imperiled species.

Key words: conservation, endangered species, genetic diversity, genetic load, small population