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Conservation Genetics:

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Red squirrel conservation genetics. ... due to loss of habitat and introduction of American grey squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conservation Genetics:


1
Conservation Genetics
  • the link between population genetics and the
    conservation of biodiversity.

Dr. Marie L. Hale
2
Conservation genetics
  • Conservation genetics is the application of
    genetics to preserve species as dynamic entities
    capable of coping with environmental change.
  • The development of conservation genetics has been
    driven by what many consider to be a global
    environmental crisis the sixth extinction
  • Very young science
  • First journal in 2000
  • First textbook in 2002

3
(No Transcript)
4
Molecular tools
  • Many different markers
  • mtDNA sequences
  • chloroplast DNA sequences
  • nuclear DNA sequences
  • microsatellites
  • minisatellites
  • AFLP (amplified fragment length polymorphisms)
  • RAPD (random amplified polymorphic DNA)
  • Marker chosen depends on the question to be
    answered.

5
What are microsatellites?
  • Short tandem repeats (2 6 bp).
  • Highly variable among individuals in the number
    of repeats.
  • High mutation rate (replication slippage).
  • Scattered throughout the genome.
  • Believed to be selectively neutral.

6
Microsatellite variation
  • Microsatellite region amplified with PCR
    (Polymerase Chain Reaction).

7
Microsatellite data
8
Why are they so useful?
  • High level of polymorphism means we can generally
    tell individuals apart.
  • Very short fragments so can amplify really small
    amounts of DNA which means can devise
    non-invasive sampling methods (e.g. hair and
    faeces), or old museum specimens.
  • Lots of microsatellites spread throughout the
    genome, so we can get lots of independent
    information for each individual. Makes these a
    very powerful tool for resolving relationships.
  • Disadvantages?
  • Have to identify microsatellite regions for each
    new species and design primers to amplify (with
    PCR) the specific microsatellite regions in each
    species. (This takes anything from 2-6 months
    work and costs around 10,000 per species).

9
What sort of questions can we answer with them?
Source of invasions / colonisation routes
Dispersal / structure
Hybridisation / introgression
Impact of habitat change
Parentage / mating systems
Level of diversity
10
Red squirrel conservation genetics.
  • Red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) native to
    Britain but severe population decline due to loss
    of habitat and introduction of American grey
    squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis).
  • Little known about remaining populations level
    and pattern of diversity, dispersal, habitat use,
    impact of habitat fragmentation etc.
  • This knowledge is essential to devise a
    management plan to conserve remaining populations.

11
Squirrel data collected.
  • 102 individuals genotyped at 4 microsatellite
    loci.
  • Location of each sample recorded (Ordnance survey
    grid reference).
  • Date collected recorded (many were museum
    specimens).

12
Structure dispersal.
  • Question 1 How many populations are there?
  • Question 2 What is the minimum distance between
    habitat patches that acts as a barrier to
    dispersal between patches?

Habitat patches plotted from GIS data and
satellite photos. Habitat highly fragmented
approx 174,000 separate forest fragments
(separated by more than 25m) in study area.
0 20 40km
13
Structure dispersal.
  • populations are groups of interbreeding
    individuals.
  • So natural populations should be in
    Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium at selectively neutral
    loci (assuming little migration, mutation,
    drift).

If we include samples from two or more real
populations as a single population in our
analysis, we find a deficit of heterozygotes from
that expected under Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
(the Wahlund effect).
10km
10km
14
Structure dispersal.
We can determine maximum usual dispersal
distance between habitat patches by grouping
sampling locations based on distance between the
patches.
The maximum distance between patches at which
samples are in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium is the
maximum usual dispersal distance.
15
Dispersal in squirrels
  • Squirrels collected in habitat patches separated
    by ? 1.5km of open ground formed populations in
    Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
  • When samples collected in habitat patches gt 1.5km
    apart were included as a single population
    there was a deficit of heterozygotes i.e.
    non-random mating.

deficit of heterozygotes significantly gt
0. Usual dispersal distance ? 1.5km.



16
Squirrel populations
  • Squirrel populations include all samples
    collected within groups of forest patches
    separated by ? 1.5km of open ground.
  • 10 populations in sample area.

17
Genetic differentiation
  • Question 3 Are the populations genetically
    differentiated?
  • Question 4 What is the geographic pattern of any
    differentiation?

AMOVA (Analysis of Molecular Variance)
Fixation index FST 0.161 p lt 0.0001
Squirrel populations are genetically
differentiated
18
Pairwise genetic distance
  • Calculate pairwise genetic distance between all
    possible pairs of populations.
  • A distance of 0.0 no differentiation a
    distance of 1.0 complete differentiation.

19
Genetic differentiation
Unrooted UPGMA Neis genetic distance

Hale et al. (2001) Science 293 2246-2248.
20
Regional differentiation
Do the 3 regions represent real distinct
groupings of squirrels, or are they just an
artificial construct of the clustering
analysis? At what level is the genetic
differentiation important? Is there more genetic
differentiation among regions or among
populations within regions? (Should we just
conserve regions or are individual populations
important?)
Hale et al. (2001) Science 293 2246-2248.
21
Are the regions real?
  • 3 level AMOVA for hierarchical structure

Fixation indices FST 0.215 p lt 0.0001
(total differentiation) FSC 0.059 p lt
0.0001 (differentiation among
populations within regions) FCT 0.165 p lt
0.0001 (differentiation among regions)
22
Genotype assignment
  • Genotype assignment methods use the entire
    multilocus genotype to determine the likelihood
    of each individual being a member of each
    predefined population.

Individual multilocus genotypes
Allele frequencies in populations for Scv10
23
Genotype assignment
  • Example of likelihood values for squirrels caught
    in the Northern region

For each region, significantly more squirrels
were assigned to the region they were collected
in than the other two regions (P lt 0.001).
This will only occur if there are real genetic
differences between the regions.
24
c)
Regions are the basic conservation unit for
squirrels.
Hale et al. (2001) Science 293 2246-2248.
25
Are squirrels using corridors?
  • Question 5 How have changes to the landscape
    affected red squirrel populations?

Kielder Forest planted 1945 1960. Trees
matured during 1980s. Has this new conifer
forest created a biological corridor connecting
squirrel populations?
Kielder Forest
26
Temporal variation
Collection dates (decades) for squirrel specimens
Range 1861 to 2000, 110 individuals.
Hale et al. (2001) Science 293 2246-2248.
27
Temporal variation
Eastern no change in gene frequencies over time.
FST -0.015, P 0.728, df
3,56. Western gene frequencies have changed
over time. FST 0.128, P lt 0.001,
df 4,55.
Significant pairwise FST values are indicated in
red (P lt 0.05). All decades prior to 1980 are
significantly different from all decades after
the 1980s.
Hale et al. (2001) Science 293 2246-2248.
28
Temporal variation

FST 0.128, P lt 0.001, df 4,55.

Hale et al. (2001) Science 293 2246-2248.
29
Change in Cumbria
Pre 1980.
Hale et al. (2001) Science 293 2246-2248.
30
Red squirrel conclusions
  • Habitat fragments separated by ? 1.5km of open
    ground can be considered a single habitat
    containing a single population.
  • The three regions should be treated as distinct
    entities for management.
  • The integrity of the 3 regions has been lost with
    the recent connection of the Northern and Western
    regions through Kielder Forest. Genetic diversity
    in the Western region is in danger of being lost
    due to swamping by migrants from the Northern
    region.

31
Resources
  • Frankham R., Ballou J.D. Briscoe D.A. (2002)
    Introduction to Conservation Genetics. Cambridge
    Uni Press.
  • Issues of the journal Conservation Genetics.
    Publisher Springer Netherlands.
  • Hedrick P.W. (2001) Conservation genetics where
    are we now? Trends in Ecology Evolution 16
    629-636.
  • DeSalle R. (2005) Genetics at the brink of
    extinction. Heredity 94 386-387.
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