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Conservation Genetics and extinction

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Title: Conservation Genetics and extinction


1
Conservation Genetics and extinction
2
Conservation Genetics
  • 5 major extinction events
  • Rate of extinction today is of concern

3
Rate of Extinction
  • Many species in the past have gone extinct eg.
    dinosaurs
  • Concerns today is the rate which species are
    disappearing eg. Birds are at rate of 100X faster
    (Pimm et al. 2006 PNAS 10310941-10946) than in
    the past
  • CO2 entering into the oceans affecting coral
    reefs (Zeebe et al 2008 Science 32151-52)

4
Extinction
5
Extinction
6
Yellow Penguin story mtDNA sequencesBoessenkool
et al 2009 (Pro R Soc B)
M. waitaha
  • Used morphological (Ancient bones) characters to
    identify ancient species
  • Megadyptes waitaha sp.nov.
  • Mt DNA aid with species confirmation

M. antipodes
7
Sample collections and breeding range blue
region
Yellow Penguin story mtDNA sequencesBoessenkool
et al 2009 (Mol Ecol)
Haplotype network using control region (mt DNA)
Boessenkool et al 2009
8
IUCN Categories
  • Vulnerable
  • 10 prob of extinction over 100 years
  • Endangered
  • 20 prob of extinction over 20 years or 5
    generations
  • Critically endangered
  • 50 prob of extinction over 10 years or 3
    generations
  • IUCN Scale
  • Not Evaluated (NE)
  • Data Deficient (DD)
  • Least Concern (LC)
  • Near Threatened (NT) eg. yellow ladys slipper
  • Vulnerable (VU)
  • Endangered (EN) eg. great basin pocket mouse
  • Critically Endangered (CR)
  • Extinct in the wild (EW) eg. greater sage-grouse
  • Extinct (EX)

9
International Union for Conservation of
Nature (http//www.iucn.org/) Species of the
Day Plants Animals Insects
10
Categories from IUCN
11
Biodiversity
  • IUCN3 fundamental levels
  • Ecosystem
  • Species
  • Genetic
  • Why conserve it?
  • Values
  • To keep every cog and wheel is the first
    precaution of intelligent tinkeringA. Leopold

12
Ecosystem Services
  • Essential biological services provided naturally
    by healthy ecosystems
  • Oxygen production by plants
  • Clean water and air
  • Flood control
  • Carbon sequestration
  • Nutrient cycling
  • Pest control
  • Pollination of crops
  • 33 trillion value (global GNP 18 trillion)

13
Genetic Diversity
  • Genetic markers are very useful and very popular
    for assessing genetic diversity of species
  • Heterozgosity on average is 35 lower in
    endangered species than non-threatened species
  • Be careful on the assumption that molecular
    makers such as allozyme, microsatellites and even
    AFLP are neutral (usually)
  • Quantify adaptive variation wherever possible

14
Conservation GeneticsFrankham et al. 2002.
Introduction to Conservation Genetics. Cambridge
Univ. Press
  • Conservation genetics is the application of
    genetics to preserve species as dynamic entities
    capable of coping with environmental change
  • Genetic management of small populations
  • Resolution of taxonomic uncertainties
  • Identifying and defining units of conservation
    within and between species
  • Use of genetic information for wildlife forensics
  • Address genetic factors that affect extinction
    risk and genetic management to minimize or
    mitigate those risks

15
11 major genetic issues in conservation
biology(Frankham et al.)
  • Inbreeding and inbreeding depression
  • Loss of genetic diversity and adaptive potential
  • Population fragmentation and loss of gene flow
  • Genetic drift becomes more important than natural
    selection as main evolutionary force
  • Accumulation of deleterious mutations (lethal
    equivalents)
  • Adaptation to captivity and consequences for
    captive breeding and reintroductions
  • Taxonomic uncertainties masking true biodiversity
    or creating false biodiversity
  • Defining ESUs and management units within species
  • Forensic analyses
  • Understand species biology
  • Outbreeding depression

16
5 Broad categories of conservation genetics
publications(Allendorf and Luikart)
  • Management and reintroduction of captive
    populations, and the restoration of biological
    communities
  • Description and identification of individuals,
    genetic population structure, kin relationships,
    and taxonomic relationships
  • Detection and prediction of the effects of
    habitat loss, fragmentation and isolation
  • Detection and prediction of the effects of
    hybridization and introgression
  • Understanding the relationships between
    adaptation or fitness and the genetic characters
    of individuals or populations

17
Genetic effects of small population size
  • Effective size (Ne) usually much smaller than
    census size, compounding genetic effects
  • Genetic driftloss of alleles
  • Fixation in extreme case
  • Loss of adaptive potential?
  • Inbreeding
  • Decreases heterozygosity
  • Expression of deleterious recessive mutations
  • Chance of extinction of locally adapted forms
  • Reintroduction of other forms may not be
    successful

18
Locally adapted forms
  • Phenotype product of genotype and environment
  • VP VG VE
  • Types of phenotypic variation
  • Morphology
  • Peppered moths in UK
  • Gazelles in Saudi Arabia
  • Bighorn sheep in Alberta
  • Behavior
  • Migration in birds and salmon
  • Feeding behavior of garter snakes
  • Adaptation to local conditions
  • Yarrow in Sierra Nevada
  • Countergradient variation
  • Genetic effects counteract environmental effects
    thus, genetic differences are opposite to
    observed phenotypic differences

19
Lacking genetic diversity
  • Cheetahs have not fair well (multiple
    bottlenecks)
  • Genetic diversity greatly reduced
  • Isozyme (Stephen OBrien et al. 1983) 47 enzymes
    and all monomorphic ( 2 pop n55)
  • 14 reciprocal skin grafts from unrelated
    individuals were not rejected (OBrien 1985)
  • In 2008, using n89 cheetahs and 19 polymorphic
    microsatellite loci, show low variation
  • Yet they are surviving well for now

20
Small population - specific problems
  • Island population are much more vulnerable to
    extinction
  • Claustrophobic events eg. hurricanes, human
    disturbances, poaching and selling of prized
    organisms
  • Lucas Keller and Peter Arcese have been studying
    island populations of song sparrows and have
    found large reductions in population size
  • Small immigration (1-2) recover diversity in 1-2
    generations (Keller et al 1994, Keller, 1998)

21
Inbreeding
  • Extreme example in humans

22
Inbreeding
  • Loss of heterozygosity and accumulate deleterious
    alleles
  • Fitness reduction in the offspring inbreeding
    depression
  • Most severe in large populations since rare
    alleles can persist as het individuals
  • Damaging to the offspring but not so much for a
    population

23
Outbreeding depression
  • Decrease in fitness resulting from outcrosses of
    individuals from differentiated populations
  • Possibly due to additive effects of alleles
    conferring advantages under different
    environments or breaking up of co-adaptive gene
    complexes
  • Particularly important when we are doing genetic
    rescue
  • Genetic and environmental backgrounds needs to
    match if at all possible

24
Genetic restoration
  • Documentation and discovery of genetic decline of
    a population(s) are the first steps
  • Why the reduction of genetic diversity eg.
    predation, habitat destruction, human hunting and
    possible inbreeding as a second step
  • Restoration of genetics diversity is a possible
    next step
  • Introduction from captive stock or other wild
    population
  • Local adaptation might be lost and possible out
    breeding depression

25
Possible genetic consequences of immigrants
genetic rescue
http//www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/regions/pacificno
rthwest/IronMountain/index.shtml
http//www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?ide
arth-talks-florida-panthe
26
Genetic restoration
  • Genetic resource banks
  • For plants there are 1,300 genebanks throughout
    the world eg. Svalbard Global Seed Vault,
    Millennium Seed Bank project Kews Garden (UK)
  • For animals there are many DNA banks (for
    sperm/eggs/embryos) eg. Centre for Reproduction
    of Endangered Species San Diego Zoo, Calif.
  • Issues to think about
  • May not work eg. technical failures, in viable
    specimens
  • Preservation problems
  • Specimens are frozen in time may not adapt to
    new environment

27
Extreme genetic restoration
  • Propagation for plants
  • Cloning in animals
  • Ethically are these the right things to do?
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