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Effects of a founder event and supplementary introductions on genetic variation in a captive breeding population of the endangered Spanish killifish
Author(s) -
Schönhuth S.,
Luikart G.,
Doadrio I.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of fish biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.672
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1095-8649
pISSN - 0022-1112
DOI - 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2003.00265.x
Subject(s) - biology , captivity , captive breeding , inbreeding , population bottleneck , population , genetic drift , genetic monitoring , endangered species , founder effect , effective population size , zoology , inbreeding depression , genetic variation , evolutionary biology , microsatellite , ecology , allele , genetics , demography , haplotype , sociology , habitat , gene
Twelve polymorphic allozyme loci were employed to assess the genetic change in a captive breeding population of the endangered killifish Aphanius baeticus in the Doñana National Park, south‐western Spain. The initial founder event did not significantly reduce the allelic richness or the expected heterozygosity. No genetic bottleneck signature was detected by tests for deviation from mutation‐drift equilibrium. The F ST between the wild source and captive population, however, was relatively high (0·053 or 0·122 when excluding or including the locus IDHP‐1 * respectively), after just two to three generations in captivity. Two generations after the incorporation of 68 new wild specimens (greater than five generations after founding) decreased the genetic differences and the F ST (0·041 excluding IDHP‐1 *). The restoration efforts appeared to be helpful and the study of 12 polymorphic loci and a sensitive parameter such as F ST were useful for monitoring genetic changes in captivity. Nonetheless, future monitoring should include additional highly polymorphic loci (microsatellites) to achieve higher power to detect genetic change. Such restoration and monitoring efforts should help to avoid rapid inbreeding, adaptation to captivity, and to maintain the long‐term evolutionary potential in small isolated populations.

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