Effective population sizes and adaptive genetic variation in a captive bird population

Captive populations are considered a key component of ex situ conservation programs. Research on multiple taxa has shown the differential success of maintaining demographic versus genetic stability and viability in captive populations. In typical captive populations, usually founded by few or relate...

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Main Authors: Giridhar Athrey, Nikolas Faust, Anne-Sophie Charlotte Hieke, I. Lehr Brisbin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-10-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/5803.pdf
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spelling doaj-13dfc70d3ad4434ba59943a3ba63dde72020-11-24T22:50:38ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-10-016e580310.7717/peerj.5803Effective population sizes and adaptive genetic variation in a captive bird populationGiridhar Athrey0Nikolas Faust1Anne-Sophie Charlotte Hieke2I. Lehr Brisbin3Department of Poultry Science, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, United States of AmericaDepartment of Poultry Science, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, United States of AmericaDepartment of Poultry Science, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, United States of AmericaSavannah River Ecology Lab, Aiken, SC, United States of AmericaCaptive populations are considered a key component of ex situ conservation programs. Research on multiple taxa has shown the differential success of maintaining demographic versus genetic stability and viability in captive populations. In typical captive populations, usually founded by few or related individuals, genetic diversity can be lost and inbreeding can accumulate rapidly, calling into question their ultimate utility for release into the wild. Furthermore, domestication selection for survival in captive conditions is another concern. Therefore, it is crucial to understand the dynamics of population sizes, particularly the effective population size, and genetic diversity at non-neutral and adaptive loci in captive populations. In this study, we assessed effective population sizes and genetic variation at both neutral microsatellite markers, as well as SNP variants from the MHC-B locus of a captive Red Junglefowl population. This population represents a rare instance of a population with a well-documented history in captivity, following a realistic scenario of chain-of-custody, unlike many captive lab populations. Our analyses, which included 27 individuals comprising the entirety of one captive population show very low neutral and adaptive genetic variation, as well as low effective sizes, which correspond with the known demographic history. Finally, our study also shows the divergent impacts of small effective size and inbreeding in captive populations on microsatellite versus adaptive genetic variation in the MHC-B locus. Our study provides insights into the difficulties of maintaining adaptive genetic variation in small captive populations.https://peerj.com/articles/5803.pdfJunglefowlEffective population sizeMicrosatellitesMajor histocompatibility complexCaptive populationBirds
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giridhar Athrey
Nikolas Faust
Anne-Sophie Charlotte Hieke
I. Lehr Brisbin
spellingShingle Giridhar Athrey
Nikolas Faust
Anne-Sophie Charlotte Hieke
I. Lehr Brisbin
Effective population sizes and adaptive genetic variation in a captive bird population
PeerJ
Junglefowl
Effective population size
Microsatellites
Major histocompatibility complex
Captive population
Birds
author_facet Giridhar Athrey
Nikolas Faust
Anne-Sophie Charlotte Hieke
I. Lehr Brisbin
author_sort Giridhar Athrey
title Effective population sizes and adaptive genetic variation in a captive bird population
title_short Effective population sizes and adaptive genetic variation in a captive bird population
title_full Effective population sizes and adaptive genetic variation in a captive bird population
title_fullStr Effective population sizes and adaptive genetic variation in a captive bird population
title_full_unstemmed Effective population sizes and adaptive genetic variation in a captive bird population
title_sort effective population sizes and adaptive genetic variation in a captive bird population
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Captive populations are considered a key component of ex situ conservation programs. Research on multiple taxa has shown the differential success of maintaining demographic versus genetic stability and viability in captive populations. In typical captive populations, usually founded by few or related individuals, genetic diversity can be lost and inbreeding can accumulate rapidly, calling into question their ultimate utility for release into the wild. Furthermore, domestication selection for survival in captive conditions is another concern. Therefore, it is crucial to understand the dynamics of population sizes, particularly the effective population size, and genetic diversity at non-neutral and adaptive loci in captive populations. In this study, we assessed effective population sizes and genetic variation at both neutral microsatellite markers, as well as SNP variants from the MHC-B locus of a captive Red Junglefowl population. This population represents a rare instance of a population with a well-documented history in captivity, following a realistic scenario of chain-of-custody, unlike many captive lab populations. Our analyses, which included 27 individuals comprising the entirety of one captive population show very low neutral and adaptive genetic variation, as well as low effective sizes, which correspond with the known demographic history. Finally, our study also shows the divergent impacts of small effective size and inbreeding in captive populations on microsatellite versus adaptive genetic variation in the MHC-B locus. Our study provides insights into the difficulties of maintaining adaptive genetic variation in small captive populations.
topic Junglefowl
Effective population size
Microsatellites
Major histocompatibility complex
Captive population
Birds
url https://peerj.com/articles/5803.pdf
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AT annesophiecharlottehieke effectivepopulationsizesandadaptivegeneticvariationinacaptivebirdpopulation
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