This included samples from each remaining lion population in West and Central Africa, a region where lions and other wildlife are rapidly declining as a consequence of the increasing human population.
Based on the genetic data, researchers at the Leiden University in the Netherlands estimated that the split between the two major groups that can be identified in the lion must have occurred 300,000 years ago.
To explain what happened in their evolution, the researchers made a reconstruction of African climatological history.
This influenced not only the patterns we observe in the lion, but also in other large mammals such as giraffe, buffalo, hartebeest, cheetah and spotted hyena.
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A general pattern is emerging that shows that many large African savannah mammals show very similar arrangements, with unique lineages in West and Central Africa.
The strong declines in wildlife populations in large parts of West and Central Africa are therefore a reason for major concern.
The research was published in the journal Scientific Reports.
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