Gonzalez Elena G, Cerón-Souza Ivania, Mateo José A, Zardoya Rafael
New address: Departamento de Biodiversidad y Biología Evolutiva, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, MNCN-CSIC, José Gutiérrez Abascal, 2, Madrid, 28006, Spain.
CCMAR, Campus de Gambelas - Universidade do Algarve, Faro, 8005-139, Portugal.
BMC Genet. 2014 Nov 25;15:121. doi: 10.1186/s12863-014-0121-8.
The giant lizard of La Gomera (Gallotia bravoana), is an endemic lacertid of this Canary Island that lives confined to a very restricted area of occupancy in a steep cliff, and is catalogued as Critically Endangered by IUCN. We present the first population genetic analysis of the wild population as well as of captive-born individuals (for which paternity data are available) from a recovery center. Current genetic variability, and inferred past demographic changes were determined in order to discern the relative contribution of natural versus human-mediated effects on the observed decline in population size.
Genetic analyses indicate that the only known natural population of the species shows low genetic diversity and acts as a single evolutionary unit. Demographic analyses inferred a prolonged decline of the species for at least 230 generations. Depending on the assumed generation time, the onset of the decline was dated between 1200-13000 years ago. Pedigree analyses of captive individuals suggest that reproductive behavior of the giant lizard of La Gomera may include polyandry, multiple paternity and female long-term sperm retention.
The current low genetic diversity of G. bravoana is the result of a long-term gradual decline. Because generation time is unknown in this lizard and estimates had large credibility intervals, it is not possible to determine the relative contribution of humans in the collapse of the population. Shorter generation times would favor a stronger influence of human pressure whereas longer generation times would favor a climate-induced origin of the decline. In any case, our analyses show that the wild population has survived for a long period of time with low levels of genetic diversity and a small effective population size. Reproductive behavior may have acted as an important inbreeding avoidance mechanism allowing the species to elude extinction. Overall, our results suggest that the species retains its adaptive potential and could restore its ancient genetic diversity under favorable conditions. Therefore, management of the giant lizard of La Gomera should concentrate efforts on enhancing population growth rates through captive breeding of the species as well as on restoring the carrying capacity of its natural habitat.
拉戈梅拉巨蜥(Gallotia bravoana)是加那利群岛的一种特有蜥蜴,仅生活在陡峭悬崖上一个非常有限的区域内,被国际自然保护联盟列为极度濒危物种。我们首次对野生种群以及来自一个恢复中心的圈养出生个体(有亲子关系数据)进行了种群遗传分析。确定了当前的遗传变异性以及推断出的过去人口动态变化,以便辨别自然因素与人类介导因素对观察到的种群数量下降的相对贡献。
遗传分析表明,该物种唯一已知的自然种群显示出低遗传多样性,并作为一个单一的进化单元发挥作用。人口动态分析推断该物种至少在230代中持续下降。根据假定的世代时间,下降开始的时间可追溯到1200 - 13000年前。对圈养个体的谱系分析表明,拉戈梅拉巨蜥的繁殖行为可能包括一妻多夫制、多个父系以及雌性长期保留精子。
当前拉戈梅拉巨蜥的低遗传多样性是长期逐渐下降的结果。由于这种蜥蜴的世代时间未知且估计的可信度区间较大,因此无法确定人类在种群崩溃中的相对贡献。较短的世代时间会使人类压力的影响更大,而较长的世代时间则会使下降的起源更倾向于由气候引起。无论如何,我们的分析表明,野生种群在低水平的遗传多样性和小有效种群规模下已经存活了很长时间。繁殖行为可能起到了重要的近亲繁殖避免机制的作用,使该物种得以避免灭绝。总体而言,我们的结果表明该物种保留了其适应潜力,并且在有利条件下可以恢复其古老的遗传多样性。因此,拉戈梅拉巨蜥的管理应集中精力通过该物种的圈养繁殖来提高种群增长率,以及恢复其自然栖息地的承载能力。