Kyriazis Christopher C, Venkatraman Madhvi, Masuda Bryce, Steiner Cynthia C, Cassin-Sackett Loren, Crampton Lisa H, Flanagan Alison M, Foster Jeffrey T, Houck Marlys L, Misuraca Ann C, Paxton Eben H, Robinson Jacqueline A, Fleischer Robert C, Ryder Oliver A, Campana Michael G, Wilder Aryn P
Conservation Science and Wildlife Health, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, Escondido, CA 92027, USA.
Center for Conservation Genomics, Smithsonian's National Zoo & Conservation Biology Institute, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20008, USA.
Curr Biol. 2025 Jun 9;35(11):2697-2708.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2025.04.078. Epub 2025 May 29.
Native Hawaiian forest birds are experiencing an unprecedented extinction crisis. In particular, the iconic Hawaiian honeycreeper radiation has declined to just 17 out of ∼60 species remaining, most threatened with extinction due to avian malaria. Here, we investigate the genomic signatures of these declines in three honeycreeper species: the critically endangered 'akikiki (Oreomystis bairdi) and 'akeke'e (Loxops caeruleirostris) and the extinct po'ouli (Melamprosops phaeosoma). Surprisingly, we find that Hawaiian honeycreepers, even the last known po'ouli individual, maintain high heterozygosity compared with other island birds, reflecting historically large population sizes. This high heterozygosity may contribute to an elevated impact of inbreeding depression, as evidenced by reduced survival and reproductive success among highly inbred 'akikiki. Demographic analysis revealed that recent precipitous declines in 'akikiki and 'akeke'e coincide with the spread of avian malaria in the late 20 century, consistent with malaria being the primary driver of population collapse. Using predictive population viability modeling, we explore potential recovery scenarios for 'akeke'e, which has recently declined below 100 individuals in the wild. Our models predict that, under current conditions, 'akeke'e is likely to go extinct in the near future. However, if mosquito control campaigns are effective at reducing malaria, recovery can still occur. These findings emphasize the urgency of ongoing mosquito control efforts, demonstrating hope for a species nearing the brink of extinction. More broadly, our study provides a detailed examination of genomic diversity, inbreeding depression, and extinction risk in a collapsing adaptive radiation, with implications for conservation of other endangered island species.
夏威夷本土森林鸟类正经历着前所未有的灭绝危机。特别是,标志性的夏威夷吸蜜鸟辐射种群已从约60种减少到仅存17种,其中大多数因禽疟而面临灭绝威胁。在此,我们研究了三种吸蜜鸟物种数量下降的基因组特征:极度濒危的阿基基(Oreomystis bairdi)和阿凯凯埃(Loxops caeruleirostris)以及已灭绝的波欧利(Melamprosops phaeosoma)。令人惊讶的是,我们发现夏威夷吸蜜鸟,即使是最后已知的波欧利个体,与其他岛屿鸟类相比仍保持着较高的杂合度,这反映出其历史上的种群规模较大。这种高杂合度可能会导致近亲繁殖衰退的影响加剧,高度近亲繁殖的阿基基在生存和繁殖成功率降低方面就证明了这一点。种群统计学分析表明,阿基基和阿凯凯埃最近的急剧数量下降与20世纪后期禽疟的传播相吻合,这与疟疾是种群崩溃的主要驱动因素一致。通过预测种群生存力模型,我们探索了阿凯凯埃的潜在恢复方案,该物种最近在野外数量已降至100只以下。我们的模型预测,在当前条件下,阿凯凯埃很可能在不久的将来灭绝。然而,如果灭蚊行动能有效减少疟疾,恢复仍有可能发生。这些发现强调了当前灭蚊工作的紧迫性,为一个濒临灭绝的物种带来了希望。更广泛地说,我们的研究详细考察了一个正在崩溃的适应性辐射中的基因组多样性、近亲繁殖衰退和灭绝风险,对其他濒危岛屿物种的保护具有启示意义。