Thirty years of conservation breeding: Assessing the genetic diversity of captive Livingstone's fruit bats.

IF 1.2 4区 生物学 Q3 VETERINARY SCIENCES Zoo Biology Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-05 DOI:10.1002/zoo.21845
Sarah Richdon, Angelica Menchaca Rodriguez, Eluned Price, Dominic Wormell, Grainne McCabe, Gareth Jones
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Abstract

Fruit bats (genus Pteropus) are typically island-endemic species important in seed dispersal and reforestation that are vulnerable to increased extinction risk. An effective method of reducing extinction risk in vulnerable species that cannot be conserved in their native habitat is establishing an ex-situ captive breeding programme. Due to anthropogenic threats and low population numbers, in the early 1990s, a captive breeding programme was established at Jersey Zoo, British Isles, for Critically Endangered Livingstone's fruit bats (Pteropus livingstonii). Here we use six polymorphic microsatellite loci to assess genetic diversity in the captive breeding population of Livingstone's fruit bats (P. livingstonii), 30 years after the programme's establishment, investigating change over generations and comparing our findings with published data from the wild population. We found no significant difference between the genetic diversity in the captive and wild populations of Livingstone's fruit bats (P. livingstonii), in both expected heterozygosity and allelic richness. The captive population has retained a comparable level of genetic diversity to that documented in the wild, and there has been no significant decline in genetic diversity over the last 30 years. We advise that a full pedigree of the paternal lineage is created to improve the management of the captive breeding programme and further reduce the possibility of inbreeding. However, it appears that the captive breeding programme is currently effective at maintaining genetic diversity at levels comparable to those seen in the wild population, which suggests reintroductions could be viable if genetic diversity remains stable in captivity.

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保护性繁殖三十年:评估圈养利文斯通果蝠的遗传多样性。
果蝠(翼蝠属)是典型的岛屿特有物种,对种子传播和植树造林非常重要,但其灭绝的风险也在增加。对于无法在其原生栖息地得到保护的脆弱物种,降低灭绝风险的有效方法是建立异地人工繁殖计划。由于人为威胁和种群数量较少,20 世纪 90 年代初,英伦三岛的泽西岛动物园为极度濒危的利文斯通果蝠(Pteropus livingstonii)建立了人工繁殖计划。在此,我们使用六个多态性微卫星位点来评估利文斯顿果蝠人工繁殖种群的遗传多样性,研究了该计划建立 30 年来的世代变化,并将我们的研究结果与野生种群的公开数据进行了比较。我们发现,利文斯通果蝠(P. livingstonii)人工饲养种群和野生种群的遗传多样性在预期杂合度和等位基因丰富度方面没有明显差异。人工饲养种群的遗传多样性水平与野生种群的遗传多样性水平相当,而且在过去 30 年中,遗传多样性并没有显著下降。我们建议建立完整的父系血统,以改善圈养繁殖计划的管理,进一步降低近亲繁殖的可能性。不过,圈养繁殖计划目前似乎能有效地将遗传多样性维持在与野生种群相当的水平,这表明如果圈养中的遗传多样性保持稳定,重新引入是可行的。
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来源期刊
Zoo Biology
Zoo Biology 生物-动物学
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
15.40%
发文量
85
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Zoo Biology is concerned with reproduction, demographics, genetics, behavior, medicine, husbandry, nutrition, conservation and all empirical aspects of the exhibition and maintenance of wild animals in wildlife parks, zoos, and aquariums. This diverse journal offers a forum for effectively communicating scientific findings, original ideas, and critical thinking related to the role of wildlife collections and their unique contribution to conservation.
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