Genetic load and adaptive potential of a recovered avian species that narrowly avoided extinction

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Genetic load and adaptive potential of a recovered avian species that narrowly avoided extinction. / Femerling, Georgette; Oosterhout, Cock van; Feng, Shaohong; Bristol, Rachel M.; Zhang, Guojie; Groombridge, Jim; Gilbert, M. Thomas P.; Morales, Hernán E.

bioRxiv, 2022.

Research output: Working paperPreprintResearch

Harvard

Femerling, G, Oosterhout, CV, Feng, S, Bristol, RM, Zhang, G, Groombridge, J, Gilbert, MTP & Morales, HE 2022 'Genetic load and adaptive potential of a recovered avian species that narrowly avoided extinction' bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.12.20.521169

APA

Femerling, G., Oosterhout, C. V., Feng, S., Bristol, R. M., Zhang, G., Groombridge, J., Gilbert, M. T. P., & Morales, H. E. (2022). Genetic load and adaptive potential of a recovered avian species that narrowly avoided extinction. bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.12.20.521169

Vancouver

Femerling G, Oosterhout CV, Feng S, Bristol RM, Zhang G, Groombridge J et al. Genetic load and adaptive potential of a recovered avian species that narrowly avoided extinction. bioRxiv. 2022. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.12.20.521169

Author

Femerling, Georgette ; Oosterhout, Cock van ; Feng, Shaohong ; Bristol, Rachel M. ; Zhang, Guojie ; Groombridge, Jim ; Gilbert, M. Thomas P. ; Morales, Hernán E. / Genetic load and adaptive potential of a recovered avian species that narrowly avoided extinction. bioRxiv, 2022.

Bibtex

@techreport{a9e593f4b49b4d8db056ca94bb410bc4,
title = "Genetic load and adaptive potential of a recovered avian species that narrowly avoided extinction",
abstract = "High genetic diversity is often a good predictor of long-term population viability, yet some species persevere despite having low genetic diversity. Here we study the genomic erosion of the Seychelles paradise flycatcher (Terpsiphone corvina), a species that narrowly avoided extinction after having declined to 28 individuals in the 1960s. The species recovered unassisted to over 250 individuals in the 1990s and was downlisted from Critically Endangered to Vulnerable in the IUCN Red List in 2020. By comparing historical, pre-bottleneck (130+ years old) and modern genomes, we uncovered a 10-fold loss of genetic diversity. The genome shows signs of historical inbreeding during the bottleneck in the 1960s, but low levels of recent inbreeding after the demographic recovery. We show that the proportion of severely deleterious mutations has reduced in modern individuals, but mildly deleterious mutations have remained unchanged. Computer simulations suggest that the Seychelles paradise flycatcher avoided extinction and recovered due to its long-term small Ne. This reduced the masked load and made the species more resilient to inbreeding. However, we also show that the chronically small Ne and the severe bottleneck resulted in very low genetic diversity in the modern population. Our simulations show this is likely to reduce the species{\textquoteright} adaptive potential when faced with environmental change, thereby compromising its long-term population viability. In light of rapid global rates of population decline, our work highlights the importance of considering genomic erosion and computer modelling in conservation assessments",
author = "Georgette Femerling and Oosterhout, {Cock van} and Shaohong Feng and Bristol, {Rachel M.} and Guojie Zhang and Jim Groombridge and Gilbert, {M. Thomas P.} and Morales, {Hern{\'a}n E.}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1101/2022.12.20.521169",
language = "English",
publisher = "bioRxiv",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "bioRxiv",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Genetic load and adaptive potential of a recovered avian species that narrowly avoided extinction

AU - Femerling, Georgette

AU - Oosterhout, Cock van

AU - Feng, Shaohong

AU - Bristol, Rachel M.

AU - Zhang, Guojie

AU - Groombridge, Jim

AU - Gilbert, M. Thomas P.

AU - Morales, Hernán E.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - High genetic diversity is often a good predictor of long-term population viability, yet some species persevere despite having low genetic diversity. Here we study the genomic erosion of the Seychelles paradise flycatcher (Terpsiphone corvina), a species that narrowly avoided extinction after having declined to 28 individuals in the 1960s. The species recovered unassisted to over 250 individuals in the 1990s and was downlisted from Critically Endangered to Vulnerable in the IUCN Red List in 2020. By comparing historical, pre-bottleneck (130+ years old) and modern genomes, we uncovered a 10-fold loss of genetic diversity. The genome shows signs of historical inbreeding during the bottleneck in the 1960s, but low levels of recent inbreeding after the demographic recovery. We show that the proportion of severely deleterious mutations has reduced in modern individuals, but mildly deleterious mutations have remained unchanged. Computer simulations suggest that the Seychelles paradise flycatcher avoided extinction and recovered due to its long-term small Ne. This reduced the masked load and made the species more resilient to inbreeding. However, we also show that the chronically small Ne and the severe bottleneck resulted in very low genetic diversity in the modern population. Our simulations show this is likely to reduce the species’ adaptive potential when faced with environmental change, thereby compromising its long-term population viability. In light of rapid global rates of population decline, our work highlights the importance of considering genomic erosion and computer modelling in conservation assessments

AB - High genetic diversity is often a good predictor of long-term population viability, yet some species persevere despite having low genetic diversity. Here we study the genomic erosion of the Seychelles paradise flycatcher (Terpsiphone corvina), a species that narrowly avoided extinction after having declined to 28 individuals in the 1960s. The species recovered unassisted to over 250 individuals in the 1990s and was downlisted from Critically Endangered to Vulnerable in the IUCN Red List in 2020. By comparing historical, pre-bottleneck (130+ years old) and modern genomes, we uncovered a 10-fold loss of genetic diversity. The genome shows signs of historical inbreeding during the bottleneck in the 1960s, but low levels of recent inbreeding after the demographic recovery. We show that the proportion of severely deleterious mutations has reduced in modern individuals, but mildly deleterious mutations have remained unchanged. Computer simulations suggest that the Seychelles paradise flycatcher avoided extinction and recovered due to its long-term small Ne. This reduced the masked load and made the species more resilient to inbreeding. However, we also show that the chronically small Ne and the severe bottleneck resulted in very low genetic diversity in the modern population. Our simulations show this is likely to reduce the species’ adaptive potential when faced with environmental change, thereby compromising its long-term population viability. In light of rapid global rates of population decline, our work highlights the importance of considering genomic erosion and computer modelling in conservation assessments

U2 - 10.1101/2022.12.20.521169

DO - 10.1101/2022.12.20.521169

M3 - Preprint

BT - Genetic load and adaptive potential of a recovered avian species that narrowly avoided extinction

PB - bioRxiv

ER -

ID: 336466872