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Genomic impact of severe population decline in a nomadic songbird

Uncovering the population genetic histories of non-model organisms is increasingly possible through advances in next generation sequencing and DNA sampling of museum specimens. This new information can inform conservation of threatened species, particularly those for which historical and contemporar...

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Autores principales: Crates, Ross, Olah, George, Adamski, Marcin, Aitken, Nicola, Banks, Sam, Ingwersen, Dean, Ranjard, Louis, Rayner, Laura, Stojanovic, Dejan, Suchan, Tomasz, von Takach Dukai, Brenton, Heinsohn, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6812763/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31647830
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223953
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author Crates, Ross
Olah, George
Adamski, Marcin
Aitken, Nicola
Banks, Sam
Ingwersen, Dean
Ranjard, Louis
Rayner, Laura
Stojanovic, Dejan
Suchan, Tomasz
von Takach Dukai, Brenton
Heinsohn, Robert
author_facet Crates, Ross
Olah, George
Adamski, Marcin
Aitken, Nicola
Banks, Sam
Ingwersen, Dean
Ranjard, Louis
Rayner, Laura
Stojanovic, Dejan
Suchan, Tomasz
von Takach Dukai, Brenton
Heinsohn, Robert
author_sort Crates, Ross
collection PubMed
description Uncovering the population genetic histories of non-model organisms is increasingly possible through advances in next generation sequencing and DNA sampling of museum specimens. This new information can inform conservation of threatened species, particularly those for which historical and contemporary population data are unavailable or challenging to obtain. The critically endangered, nomadic regent honeyeater Anthochaera phrygia was abundant and widespread throughout south-eastern Australia prior to a rapid population decline and range contraction since the 1970s. A current estimated population of 250–400 individuals is distributed sparsely across 600,000 km(2) from northern Victoria to southern Queensland. Using hybridization RAD (hyRAD) techniques, we obtained a SNP dataset from 64 museum specimens (date 1879–1960), 102 ‘recent’ (1989–2012) and 52 ‘current’ (2015–2016) wild birds sampled throughout the historical and contemporary range. We aimed to estimate population genetic structure, genetic diversity and population size of the regent honeyeater prior to its rapid decline. We then assessed the impact of the decline on recent and current population size, structure and genetic diversity. Museum sampling showed population structure in regent honeyeaters was historically low, which remains the case despite a severe fragmentation of the breeding range. Population decline has led to minimal loss of genetic diversity since the 1980’s. Capacity to quantify the overall magnitude of both genetic diversity loss and population decline was limited by the poorer quality of genomic data derived from museum specimens. A rapid population decline, coupled with the regent honeyeater’s high mobility, means a detectable genomic impact of this decline has not yet manifested. Extinction may occur in this nomadic species before a detectable genomic impact of small population size is realised. We discuss the implications for genetic management of endangered mobile species and enhancing the value of museum specimens in population genomic studies.
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spelling pubmed-68127632019-11-03 Genomic impact of severe population decline in a nomadic songbird Crates, Ross Olah, George Adamski, Marcin Aitken, Nicola Banks, Sam Ingwersen, Dean Ranjard, Louis Rayner, Laura Stojanovic, Dejan Suchan, Tomasz von Takach Dukai, Brenton Heinsohn, Robert PLoS One Research Article Uncovering the population genetic histories of non-model organisms is increasingly possible through advances in next generation sequencing and DNA sampling of museum specimens. This new information can inform conservation of threatened species, particularly those for which historical and contemporary population data are unavailable or challenging to obtain. The critically endangered, nomadic regent honeyeater Anthochaera phrygia was abundant and widespread throughout south-eastern Australia prior to a rapid population decline and range contraction since the 1970s. A current estimated population of 250–400 individuals is distributed sparsely across 600,000 km(2) from northern Victoria to southern Queensland. Using hybridization RAD (hyRAD) techniques, we obtained a SNP dataset from 64 museum specimens (date 1879–1960), 102 ‘recent’ (1989–2012) and 52 ‘current’ (2015–2016) wild birds sampled throughout the historical and contemporary range. We aimed to estimate population genetic structure, genetic diversity and population size of the regent honeyeater prior to its rapid decline. We then assessed the impact of the decline on recent and current population size, structure and genetic diversity. Museum sampling showed population structure in regent honeyeaters was historically low, which remains the case despite a severe fragmentation of the breeding range. Population decline has led to minimal loss of genetic diversity since the 1980’s. Capacity to quantify the overall magnitude of both genetic diversity loss and population decline was limited by the poorer quality of genomic data derived from museum specimens. A rapid population decline, coupled with the regent honeyeater’s high mobility, means a detectable genomic impact of this decline has not yet manifested. Extinction may occur in this nomadic species before a detectable genomic impact of small population size is realised. We discuss the implications for genetic management of endangered mobile species and enhancing the value of museum specimens in population genomic studies. Public Library of Science 2019-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6812763/ /pubmed/31647830 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223953 Text en © 2019 Crates et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Crates, Ross
Olah, George
Adamski, Marcin
Aitken, Nicola
Banks, Sam
Ingwersen, Dean
Ranjard, Louis
Rayner, Laura
Stojanovic, Dejan
Suchan, Tomasz
von Takach Dukai, Brenton
Heinsohn, Robert
Genomic impact of severe population decline in a nomadic songbird
title Genomic impact of severe population decline in a nomadic songbird
title_full Genomic impact of severe population decline in a nomadic songbird
title_fullStr Genomic impact of severe population decline in a nomadic songbird
title_full_unstemmed Genomic impact of severe population decline in a nomadic songbird
title_short Genomic impact of severe population decline in a nomadic songbird
title_sort genomic impact of severe population decline in a nomadic songbird
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6812763/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31647830
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223953
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