Department of Ecology and Genetics (Animal ecology), Uppsala University, 752 36 Uppsala, Sweden.
Department of Bioinformatics and Genetics, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Box 50007, 10405 Stockholm, Sweden.
Curr Biol. 2019 Jan 7;29(1):165-170.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.11.055. Epub 2018 Dec 27.
Many endangered species have experienced severe population declines within the last centuries [1, 2]. However, despite concerns about negative fitness effects resulting from increased genetic drift and inbreeding, there is a lack of empirical data on genomic changes in conjunction with such declines [3-7]. Here, we use whole genomes recovered from century-old historical museum specimens to quantify the genomic consequences of small population size in the critically endangered Grauer's and endangered mountain gorillas. We find a reduction of genetic diversity and increase in inbreeding and genetic load in the Grauer's gorilla, which experienced severe population declines in recent decades. In contrast, the small but relatively stable mountain gorilla population has experienced little genomic change during the last century. These results suggest that species histories as well as the rate of demographic change may influence how population declines affect genome diversity.
许多濒危物种在过去几个世纪中经历了严重的种群数量下降[1,2]。然而,尽管人们担心由于遗传漂变和近亲繁殖增加会导致负面的适应度效应,但关于这种下降与基因组变化之间的关系的经验数据仍然缺乏[3-7]。在这里,我们使用从百年历史博物馆标本中回收的全基因组,定量评估极度濒危的格雷氏大猩猩和濒危的山地大猩猩中种群数量减少所带来的基因组后果。我们发现格雷氏大猩猩的遗传多样性减少,近亲繁殖和遗传负荷增加,而在过去几十年中,格雷氏大猩猩的种群数量急剧下降。相比之下,数量虽小但相对稳定的山地大猩猩种群在过去一个世纪中经历的基因组变化很小。这些结果表明,物种历史以及人口变化的速度可能会影响种群数量减少如何影响基因组多样性。