Reference genome of the Gophersnake, Pituophis catenifer (Serpentes: Colubridae).

Journal: The Journal Of Heredity
Published:
Abstract

The Gophersnake, Pituophis catenifer, is a habitat generalist that ranges throughout the western half of the United Sates and southward into México. Five of the six subspecies, P. catenifer affinis (Sonoran Gophersnake), P. catenifer annectens (San Diego Gophersnake), P. catenifer catenifer (Pacific Gophersnake), P. catenifer deserticola (Great Basin Gophersanke), and P. catenifer pumilus (Santa Cruz Island Gophersnake), occur in California and span virtually all the state's diverse terrestrial habitats. These subspecies are ecologically and morphologically distinct from one another, although existing genetic data indicate there is genetic admixture across some of their contact zones. Given that these subspecies occur in such different environments they will not all respond to climate change and anthropogenic stressors equally. Here, we report a new, chromosome-level assembly of P. catenifer as part of the California Conservation Genomics Project (CCGP). Consistent with the reference genome strategy of the CCGP, we used Pacific Biosciences HiFi long reads and Hi-C chromatin-proximity sequencing technology to produce a de novo assembled genome. The assembly comprises 426 scaffolds covering 1,804,944,895 bp, has a contig N50 of 37.5 Mb, a scaffold N50 of 161 Mb, and BUSCO completeness score of 95.3%. This genome will be a foundational resource for future studies on the conservation, adaptation, biogeography, and the systematics of P. catenifer.

Authors
Jesse Grismer, Merly Escalona, Courtney Miller, Mohan P Marimuthu, Oanh Nguyen, Eric Beraut, Sam Sacco, Erin Toffelmier, Robert Cooper, Ian Wang, Robert Fisher, H Shaffer