4.7 Article

Genetic diversity, demographic history and neo-sex chromosomes in the Critically Endangered Raso lark

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2019.2613

Keywords

recombination suppression; Alauda; conservation; Cape Verde; island endemic; demography

Funding

  1. Sir Peter Scott Studentship of Trinity College, Cambridge
  2. Rouse Ball Eddington Fund of Trinity College, Cambridge
  3. VOCATIO Award
  4. William Bateson Fellowship of St John's College, Cambridge
  5. RSPB
  6. CEPF
  7. BirdLife International's Preventing Extinctions Initiative

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Small effective population sizes could expose island species to inbreeding and loss of genetic variation. Here, we investigate factors shaping genetic diversity in the Raso lark, which has been restricted to a single islet for approximately 500 years, with a population size of a few hundred. We assembled a reference genome for the related Eurasian skylark and then assessed diversity and demographic history using RAD-seq data (75 samples from Raso larks and two related mainland species). We first identify broad tracts of suppressed recombination in females, indicating enlarged neo-sex chromosomes. We then show that genetic diversity across autosomes in the Raso lark is lower than in its mainland relatives, but inconsistent with long-term persistence at its current population size. Finally, we find that genetic signatures of the recent population contraction are overshadowed by an ancient expansion and persistence of a very large population until the human settlement of Cape Verde. Our findings show how genome-wide approaches to study endangered species can help avoid confounding effects of genome architecture on diversity estimates, and how present-day diversity can be shaped by ancient demographic events.

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