Hartmann Stefanie A, Schaefer H Martin, Segelbacher Gernot
Wildlife Ecology and Management, Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources, University of Freiburg, Tennenbacher Straße 4, 79106, Freiburg, Germany; Department of Evolutionary Biology and Animal Ecology, Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Hauptstr. 1, 79104, Freiburg, Germany.
Mol Ecol. 2014 Dec;23(23):5712-25. doi: 10.1111/mec.12975. Epub 2014 Nov 11.
Many endangered species suffer from the loss of genetic diversity, but some populations may be able to thrive even if genetically depleted. To investigate the underlying genetic processes of population bottlenecks, we apply an innovative approach for assessing genetic diversity in the last known population of the endangered Pale-headed Brushfinch (Atlapetes pallidiceps) in Ecuador. First, we measure genetic diversity at eleven neutral microsatellite loci and adaptive SNP variation in five Toll-like receptor (TLR) immune system genes. Bottleneck tests confirm genetic drift as the main force shaping genetic diversity in this species and indicate a 99 % reduction in population size dating back several hundred years. Second, we compare contemporary microsatellite diversity with historic museum samples of A. pallidiceps, finding no change in genetic diversity. Third, we compare genetic diversity in the Pale-headed Brushfinch with two co-occurring-related brushfinch species (Atlapetes latinuchus, Buarremon torquatus), finding a reduction of up to 91% diversity in the immune system genes but not in microsatellites. High TLR diversity is linked to decreased survival probabilities in A. pallidiceps. Low TLR diversity is thus probably an adaptation to the specific selection regime within its currently very restricted distribution (approximately 200 ha), but could severely restrict the adaptive potential of the species in the long run. Our study illustrates the importance of investigating both neutral and adaptive markers to assess the effect of population bottlenecks and for recommending specific management plans in endangered species.
许多濒危物种都面临着遗传多样性丧失的问题,但有些种群即便基因匮乏也可能蓬勃发展。为了探究种群瓶颈背后的遗传过程,我们采用了一种创新方法,来评估厄瓜多尔濒危的淡头刷尾雀(Atlapetes pallidiceps)最后已知种群的遗传多样性。首先,我们在11个中性微卫星位点测量了遗传多样性,并在5个Toll样受体(TLR)免疫系统基因中检测了适应性单核苷酸多态性变异。瓶颈效应测试证实了遗传漂变是塑造该物种遗传多样性的主要力量,并表明种群规模在数百年前减少了99%。其次,我们将当代微卫星多样性与淡头刷尾雀的历史博物馆样本进行比较,发现遗传多样性没有变化。第三,我们将淡头刷尾雀的遗传多样性与两种同域分布的近缘刷尾雀物种(Atlapetes latinuchus、Buarremon torquatus)进行比较,发现免疫系统基因的多样性降低了多达91%,但微卫星方面没有变化。高TLR多样性与淡头刷尾雀较低的生存概率相关。因此,低TLR多样性可能是对其目前非常有限的分布区域(约200公顷)内特定选择机制的一种适应,但从长远来看,可能会严重限制该物种的适应潜力。我们的研究说明了调查中性和适应性标记对于评估种群瓶颈效应以及为濒危物种推荐具体管理计划的重要性。