W.K. Kellogg Biological Station, Michigan State University, Hickory Corners, MI, United States.
Department of Integrative Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, United States.
J Hered. 2023 Jun 22;114(4):354-366. doi: 10.1093/jhered/esad002.
Restoring gene flow among fragmented populations is discussed as a potentially powerful management strategy that could reduce inbreeding depression and cause genetic rescue. Yet, examples of assisted migration for genetic rescue remain sparse in conservation, prompting several outspoken calls for its increased use in genetic management of fragmented populations. We set out to evaluate the extent to which this strategy is underused and to determine how many imperiled species would realistically stand to benefit from genetic rescue, focusing on federally threatened or endangered vertebrate species in the United States. We developed a "genetic rescue suitability index (GR index)" based on concerns about small population problems relative to risks associated with outbreeding depression and surveyed the literature for 222 species. We found that two-thirds of these species were good candidates for consideration of assisted migration for the purpose of genetic rescue according to our suitability index. Good candidate species spanned all taxonomic groups and geographic regions, though species with more missing data tended to score lower on the suitability index. While we do not recommend a prescriptive interpretation of our GR index, we used it here to establish that assisted migration for genetic rescue is an underused strategy. For example, we found in total, "genetic rescue" was only mentioned in 11 recovery plans and has only been implemented in 3 of the species we surveyed. A potential way forward for implementation of this strategy is incorporating genetic rescue as a priority in USFWS recovery documentation. In general, our results suggest that although not appropriate for all imperiled species, many more species stand to benefit from a conservation strategy of assisted migration for genetic rescue than those for which it has previously been considered or implemented.
恢复碎片化种群之间的基因流动被认为是一种潜在的强大管理策略,可以减少近交衰退并导致遗传拯救。然而,辅助迁移用于遗传拯救的例子在保护生物学中仍然很少见,这促使人们多次强烈呼吁增加其在碎片化种群遗传管理中的应用。我们着手评估该策略的未被充分利用的程度,并确定有多少濒危物种将从遗传拯救中受益,重点关注美国联邦受威胁或濒危的脊椎动物物种。我们开发了一个“遗传拯救适宜性指数(GR 指数)”,该指数基于对小种群问题的关注,相对于与远交衰退相关的风险,我们对 222 个物种进行了文献调查。我们发现,根据我们的适宜性指数,这些物种中有三分之二是考虑辅助迁移以实现遗传拯救的良好候选物种。良好的候选物种涵盖了所有的分类群和地理区域,但数据缺失较多的物种在适宜性指数上的得分往往较低。虽然我们不建议对我们的 GR 指数进行规定性解释,但我们在这里使用它来确定辅助迁移用于遗传拯救是一种未被充分利用的策略。例如,我们总共发现“遗传拯救”仅在 11 个恢复计划中被提及,并且仅在我们调查的 3 个物种中实施了遗传拯救。实施该策略的一个潜在途径是将遗传拯救作为 USFWS 恢复文件的优先事项。总的来说,我们的结果表明,尽管不是所有濒危物种都适用,但与之前考虑或实施遗传拯救的物种相比,许多物种更有可能受益于辅助迁移的遗传拯救保护策略。