Description
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Abstract Population genetic theory related to the consequences of rapid population decline is well-developed, but there are very few empirical studies where sampling was conducted before and after a known bottleneck event. Such knowledge is of particular importance for species restoration, given links between genetic diversity and the probability of long-term persistence. To directly evaluate the relationship between current genetic diversity and past demographic events, we collected genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism data from pre-bottleneck historical (c.1906) and post-bottleneck contemporary (c.2014) samples of Pinzón giant tortoises (Chelonoidis duncanensis; n=25 and 149 individuals, respectively) endemic to a single island in the Galapagos. Pinzón giant tortoises had a historically large population size that was reduced to just 150-200 individuals in the mid 20th century. Since then, Pinzón’s tortoise population has recovered through an ex situ head-start program in which eggs or pre-emergent individuals were collected from natural nests on the island, reared ex situ in captivity until they were 4-5 years old, and subsequently repatriated. We found that the extent and distribution of genetic variation in the historical and contemporary samples was very similar, with the latter group not exhibiting the characteristic genetic patterns of recent population decline. No population structure was detected either spatially or temporally. We estimated an effective population size (Ne) of 58 (95% CI = 50-69) for the post-bottleneck population; no pre-bottleneck Ne point estimate was attainable (95% CI = 39-infinity) likely due to the sample size being lower than the true Ne. Overall, the historical sample provided a valuable benchmark for evaluating the head-start captive breeding program, revealing high retention of genetic variation and no skew in representation despite the documented bottleneck event. Moreover, this work demonstrates the effectiveness of head-starting in rescuing the Pinzón giant tortoise from almost certain extinction. (2020-06-24)
Usage notes SNP genotypic data for the contemporary sample of Pinzón Galapagos giant tortoises (Chelonoidis duncanensis)vcf file containing SNP genotypic data at 7,730 loci for the contemporary population sample (n = 149) of the Galapagos giant tortoises endemic to Pinzón Island (Chelonoidis duncanensis)Jensen_contemporary_7730loci.vcf SNP genotypic data for the contemporary and historical samples of Pinzón Galapagos giant tortoises (Chelonoidis duncanensis)vcf file containing SNP genotypic data at 2,218 loci for the historical (n = 25) and contemporary (n = 149) population samples of the Galapagos giant tortoises endemic to Pinzón Island (Chelonoidis duncanensis)Jensen_historical_contemporary_2218loci.vcf (2020-06-24)
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Notes
| Dryad version number: 1
Version status: submitted
Dryad curation status: Published
Sharing link: https://datadryad.org/stash/share/S7qx0o4SDOfvpU_Pi7OSR7nf-1LZJCM9zNT5_WNX9OQ
Storage size: 30180371
Visibility: public |