Larison Brenda, Lindsay Alec R, Bossu Christen, Sorenson Michael D, Kaplan Joseph D, Evers David C, Paruk James, DaCosta Jeffrey M, Smith Thomas B, Ruegg Kristen
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Los Angeles California USA.
Center for Tropical Research Institute of the Environment and Sustainability University of California Los Angeles California USA.
Evol Appl. 2021 Apr 10;14(6):1646-1658. doi: 10.1111/eva.13231. eCollection 2021 Jun.
Understanding how risk factors affect populations across their annual cycle is a major challenge for conserving migratory birds. For example, disease outbreaks may happen on the breeding grounds, the wintering grounds, or during migration and are expected to accelerate under climate change. The ability to identify the geographic origins of impacted individuals, especially outside of breeding areas, might make it possible to predict demographic trends and inform conservation decision-making. However, such an effort is made more challenging by the degraded state of carcasses and resulting low quality of DNA available. Here, we describe a rapid and low-cost approach for identifying the origins of birds sampled across their annual cycle that is robust even when DNA quality is poor. We illustrate the approach in the common loon (), an iconic migratory aquatic bird that is under increasing threat on both its breeding and wintering areas. Using 300 samples collected from across the breeding range, we develop a panel of 158 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) loci with divergent allele frequencies across six genetic subpopulations. We use this SNP panel to identify the breeding grounds for 142 live nonbreeding individuals and carcasses. For example, genetic assignment of loons sampled during botulism outbreaks in parts of the Great Lakes provides evidence for the significant role the lakes play as migratory stopover areas for loons that breed across wide swaths of Canada, and highlights the vulnerability of a large segment of the breeding population to botulism outbreaks that are occurring in the Great Lakes with increasing frequency. Our results illustrate that the use of SNP panels to identify breeding origins of carcasses collected during the nonbreeding season can improve our understanding of the population-specific impacts of mortality from disease and anthropogenic stressors, ultimately allowing more effective management.
了解风险因素如何在候鸟的年度周期中影响其种群,是保护候鸟面临的一项重大挑战。例如,疾病暴发可能发生在繁殖地、越冬地或迁徙期间,并且预计在气候变化的影响下会加速。识别受影响个体的地理来源的能力,尤其是在繁殖区之外,可能有助于预测种群动态趋势并为保护决策提供依据。然而,尸体的降解状态以及由此导致的可用DNA质量较低,使得这项工作更具挑战性。在此,我们描述了一种快速且低成本的方法,用于识别在候鸟年度周期中采集的鸟类样本的来源,即使在DNA质量较差的情况下该方法也很可靠。我们以普通潜鸟为例来说明这种方法,普通潜鸟是一种标志性的迁徙水鸟,其繁殖地和越冬地都面临着日益增加的威胁。我们从整个繁殖范围内收集了300个样本,开发了一组158个单核苷酸多态性(SNP)位点,这些位点在六个遗传亚种群中的等位基因频率存在差异。我们使用这个SNP面板来识别142只非繁殖期活体个体和尸体的繁殖地。例如,在五大湖部分地区肉毒杆菌中毒暴发期间采集的潜鸟样本的基因溯源,为这些湖泊作为在加拿大大片地区繁殖的潜鸟的迁徙中途停留区所起的重要作用提供了证据,并凸显了很大一部分繁殖种群易受五大湖地区频繁发生的肉毒杆菌中毒暴发影响的脆弱性。我们的结果表明,使用SNP面板来识别非繁殖季节收集的尸体的繁殖来源,可以增进我们对疾病和人为压力源导致的死亡率对特定种群的影响的理解,最终实现更有效的管理。