Genetic purging in captive endangered ungulates with extremely low effective population sizes

被引:0
作者
Eugenio López-Cortegano
Eulalia Moreno
Aurora García-Dorado
机构
[1] University of Edinburgh,Institute of Evolutionary Biology
[2] Estación Experimental de Zonas Áridas (CSIC),undefined
[3] Universidad Complutense,undefined
来源
Heredity | 2021年 / 127卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Inbreeding threatens the survival of small populations by producing inbreeding depression, but also exposes recessive deleterious effects in homozygosis allowing for genetic purging. Using inbreeding-purging theory, we analyze early survival in four pedigreed captive breeding programs of endangered ungulates where population growth was prioritized so that most adult females were allowed to contribute offspring according to their fitness. We find evidence that purging can substantially reduce inbreeding depression in Gazella cuvieri (with effective population size Ne = 14) and Nanger dama (Ne = 11). No purging is detected in Ammotragus lervia (Ne = 4), in agreement with the notion that drift overcomes purging under fast inbreeding, nor in G. dorcas (Ne = 39) where, due to the larger population size, purging is slower and detection is expected to require more generations. Thus, although smaller populations are always expected to show smaller fitness (as well as less adaptive potential) than larger ones due to higher homozygosis and deleterious fixation, our results show that a substantial fraction of their inbreeding load and inbreeding depression can be purged when breeding contributions are governed by natural selection. Since management strategies intended to maximize the ratio from the effective to the actual population size tend to reduce purging, the search for a compromise between these strategies and purging could be beneficial in the long term. This could be achieved either by allowing some level of random mating and some role of natural selection in determining breeding contributions, or by undertaking reintroductions into the wild at the earliest opportunity.
引用
收藏
页码:433 / 442
页数:9
相关论文
共 181 条
[1]  
Armbruster P(2005)Inbreeding depression in benign and stressful environments Heredity 95 235-242
[2]  
Reed DH(2010)The purge of genetic load through restricted panmixia in a Drosophila experiment J Evol Biol 23 1937-1946
[3]  
Ávila V(1997)Ancestral inbreeding only minimally affects inbreeding depression in mammalian populations J Hered 88 169-178
[4]  
Amador C(2013)On the genetic parameter determining the efficiency of purging: an estimate for Drosophila egg-to-pupae viability J Evol Biol 26 275-385
[5]  
García-Dorado A(2007)An investigation of inbreeding depression and purging in captive pedigreed populations Heredity 98 172-182
[6]  
Ballou JD(1997)The value of using probabilities of gene origin to measure genetic variability in a population Genet Sel Evol 29 5-23
[7]  
Bersabé D(2010)Conservation genetics of population bottlenecks: the role of chance, selection, and history Conserv Genet 11 463-478
[8]  
García-Dorado A(1999)Do plant populations purge their genetic load? Effects of population size and mating history on inbreeding depression Ann Rev Syst Ecol 30 479-513
[9]  
Boakes EH(2000)Interrelations between effective population size and other pedigree tools for the management of conserved populations Genet Res 75 331-343
[10]  
Wang J(2017)Inbreeding load and purging: implications for the short-term survival and the conservation management of small populations Heredity 118 177-185