Cargando…
Genomic erosion in a demographically recovered bird species during conservation rescue
The pink pigeon (Nesoenas mayeri) is an endemic species of Mauritius that has made a remarkable recovery after a severe population bottleneck in the 1970s to early 1990s. Prior to this bottleneck, an ex situ population was established from which captive‐bred individuals were released into free‐livin...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
John Wiley and Sons Inc.
2022
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9546124/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35554972 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13918 |
_version_ | 1784804972392611840 |
---|---|
author | Jackson, Hazel A. Percival‐Alwyn, Lawrence Ryan, Camilla Albeshr, Mohammed F. Venturi, Luca Morales, Hernán E. Mathers, Thomas C. Cocker, Jonathan Speak, Samuel A. Accinelli, Gonzalo G. Barker, Tom Heavens, Darren Willman, Faye Dawson, Deborah Ward, Lauren Tatayah, Vikash Zuël, Nicholas Young, Richard Concannon, Lianne Whitford, Harriet Clavijo, Bernardo Bunbury, Nancy Tyler, Kevin M. Ruhomaun, Kevin Grace, Molly K. Bruford, Michael W. Jones, Carl G. Tollington, Simon Bell, Diana J. Groombridge, Jim J. Clark, Matt Van Oosterhout, Cock |
author_facet | Jackson, Hazel A. Percival‐Alwyn, Lawrence Ryan, Camilla Albeshr, Mohammed F. Venturi, Luca Morales, Hernán E. Mathers, Thomas C. Cocker, Jonathan Speak, Samuel A. Accinelli, Gonzalo G. Barker, Tom Heavens, Darren Willman, Faye Dawson, Deborah Ward, Lauren Tatayah, Vikash Zuël, Nicholas Young, Richard Concannon, Lianne Whitford, Harriet Clavijo, Bernardo Bunbury, Nancy Tyler, Kevin M. Ruhomaun, Kevin Grace, Molly K. Bruford, Michael W. Jones, Carl G. Tollington, Simon Bell, Diana J. Groombridge, Jim J. Clark, Matt Van Oosterhout, Cock |
author_sort | Jackson, Hazel A. |
collection | PubMed |
description | The pink pigeon (Nesoenas mayeri) is an endemic species of Mauritius that has made a remarkable recovery after a severe population bottleneck in the 1970s to early 1990s. Prior to this bottleneck, an ex situ population was established from which captive‐bred individuals were released into free‐living subpopulations to increase population size and genetic variation. This conservation rescue led to rapid population recovery to 400–480 individuals, and the species was twice downlisted on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List. We analyzed the impacts of the bottleneck and genetic rescue on neutral genetic variation during and after population recovery (1993–2008) with restriction site‐associated sequencing, microsatellite analyses, and quantitative genetic analysis of studbook data of 1112 birds from zoos in Europe and the United States. We used computer simulations to study the predicted changes in genetic variation and population viability from the past into the future. Genetic variation declined rapidly, despite the population rebound, and the effective population size was approximately an order of magnitude smaller than census size. The species carried a high genetic load of circa 15 lethal equivalents for longevity. Our computer simulations predicted continued inbreeding will likely result in increased expression of deleterious mutations (i.e., a high realized load) and severe inbreeding depression. Without continued conservation actions, it is likely that the pink pigeon will go extinct in the wild within 100 years. Conservation rescue of the pink pigeon has been instrumental in the recovery of the free‐living population. However, further genetic rescue with captive‐bred birds from zoos is required to recover lost variation, reduce expression of harmful deleterious variation, and prevent extinction. The use of genomics and modeling data can inform IUCN assessments of the viability and extinction risk of species, and it helps in assessments of the conservation dependency of populations. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-9546124 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2022 |
publisher | John Wiley and Sons Inc. |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-95461242022-10-14 Genomic erosion in a demographically recovered bird species during conservation rescue Jackson, Hazel A. Percival‐Alwyn, Lawrence Ryan, Camilla Albeshr, Mohammed F. Venturi, Luca Morales, Hernán E. Mathers, Thomas C. Cocker, Jonathan Speak, Samuel A. Accinelli, Gonzalo G. Barker, Tom Heavens, Darren Willman, Faye Dawson, Deborah Ward, Lauren Tatayah, Vikash Zuël, Nicholas Young, Richard Concannon, Lianne Whitford, Harriet Clavijo, Bernardo Bunbury, Nancy Tyler, Kevin M. Ruhomaun, Kevin Grace, Molly K. Bruford, Michael W. Jones, Carl G. Tollington, Simon Bell, Diana J. Groombridge, Jim J. Clark, Matt Van Oosterhout, Cock Conserv Biol Contributed Papers The pink pigeon (Nesoenas mayeri) is an endemic species of Mauritius that has made a remarkable recovery after a severe population bottleneck in the 1970s to early 1990s. Prior to this bottleneck, an ex situ population was established from which captive‐bred individuals were released into free‐living subpopulations to increase population size and genetic variation. This conservation rescue led to rapid population recovery to 400–480 individuals, and the species was twice downlisted on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List. We analyzed the impacts of the bottleneck and genetic rescue on neutral genetic variation during and after population recovery (1993–2008) with restriction site‐associated sequencing, microsatellite analyses, and quantitative genetic analysis of studbook data of 1112 birds from zoos in Europe and the United States. We used computer simulations to study the predicted changes in genetic variation and population viability from the past into the future. Genetic variation declined rapidly, despite the population rebound, and the effective population size was approximately an order of magnitude smaller than census size. The species carried a high genetic load of circa 15 lethal equivalents for longevity. Our computer simulations predicted continued inbreeding will likely result in increased expression of deleterious mutations (i.e., a high realized load) and severe inbreeding depression. Without continued conservation actions, it is likely that the pink pigeon will go extinct in the wild within 100 years. Conservation rescue of the pink pigeon has been instrumental in the recovery of the free‐living population. However, further genetic rescue with captive‐bred birds from zoos is required to recover lost variation, reduce expression of harmful deleterious variation, and prevent extinction. The use of genomics and modeling data can inform IUCN assessments of the viability and extinction risk of species, and it helps in assessments of the conservation dependency of populations. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-05-12 2022-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9546124/ /pubmed/35554972 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13918 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Contributed Papers Jackson, Hazel A. Percival‐Alwyn, Lawrence Ryan, Camilla Albeshr, Mohammed F. Venturi, Luca Morales, Hernán E. Mathers, Thomas C. Cocker, Jonathan Speak, Samuel A. Accinelli, Gonzalo G. Barker, Tom Heavens, Darren Willman, Faye Dawson, Deborah Ward, Lauren Tatayah, Vikash Zuël, Nicholas Young, Richard Concannon, Lianne Whitford, Harriet Clavijo, Bernardo Bunbury, Nancy Tyler, Kevin M. Ruhomaun, Kevin Grace, Molly K. Bruford, Michael W. Jones, Carl G. Tollington, Simon Bell, Diana J. Groombridge, Jim J. Clark, Matt Van Oosterhout, Cock Genomic erosion in a demographically recovered bird species during conservation rescue |
title | Genomic erosion in a demographically recovered bird species during conservation rescue |
title_full | Genomic erosion in a demographically recovered bird species during conservation rescue |
title_fullStr | Genomic erosion in a demographically recovered bird species during conservation rescue |
title_full_unstemmed | Genomic erosion in a demographically recovered bird species during conservation rescue |
title_short | Genomic erosion in a demographically recovered bird species during conservation rescue |
title_sort | genomic erosion in a demographically recovered bird species during conservation rescue |
topic | Contributed Papers |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9546124/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35554972 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13918 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT jacksonhazela genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT percivalalwynlawrence genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT ryancamilla genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT albeshrmohammedf genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT venturiluca genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT moraleshernane genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT mathersthomasc genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT cockerjonathan genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT speaksamuela genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT accinelligonzalog genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT barkertom genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT heavensdarren genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT willmanfaye genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT dawsondeborah genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT wardlauren genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT tatayahvikash genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT zuelnicholas genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT youngrichard genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT concannonlianne genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT whitfordharriet genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT clavijobernardo genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT bunburynancy genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT tylerkevinm genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT ruhomaunkevin genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT gracemollyk genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT brufordmichaelw genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT jonescarlg genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT tollingtonsimon genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT belldianaj genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT groombridgejimj genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT clarkmatt genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue AT vanoosterhoutcock genomicerosioninademographicallyrecoveredbirdspeciesduringconservationrescue |