4.6 Article

Longitudinal monitoring of neutral and adaptive genomic diversity in a reintroduction

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13889

Keywords

adaptive genetic diversity; Australian fish; conservation genomics; ex-situ population management; population genomics; Murray-Darling Basin; Percichthyidae; restoration threatened species; Cuenca Murray-Darling; diversidad genetica adaptativa; especie amenazada; gestion poblacional ex situ; genomica de la conservacion; genomica de la restauracion; peces australianos; Percichthyidae

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [FT130101068, LP100200409, DP190102533]
  2. Australian Research Council [LP100200409] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Restoration programs in the form of ex-situ breeding combined with reintroductions are becoming critical to counter demographic declines and species losses. However, the lack of long-term monitoring of genetic indicators following reintroduction prevents assessments of the trajectory and persistence of reintroduced populations.
Restoration programs in the form of ex-situ breeding combined with reintroductions are becoming critical to counteract demographic declines and species losses. Such programs are increasingly using genetic management to improve conservation outcomes. However, the lack of long-term monitoring of genetic indicators following reintroduction prevents assessments of the trajectory and persistence of reintroduced populations. We carried out an extensive monitoring program in the wild for a threatened small-bodied fish (southern pygmy perch, Nannoperca australis) to assess the long-term genomic effects of its captive breeding and reintroduction. The species was rescued prior to its extirpation from the terminal lakes of Australia's Murray-Darling Basin, and then used for genetically informed captive breeding and reintroductions. Subsequent annual or biannual monitoring of abundance, fitness, and occupancy over a period of 11 years, combined with postreintroduction genetic sampling, revealed survival and recruitment of reintroduced fish. Genomic analyses based on data from the original wild rescued, captive born, and reintroduced cohorts revealed low inbreeding and strong maintenance of neutral and candidate adaptive genomic diversity across multiple generations. An increasing trend in the effective population size of the reintroduced population was consistent with field monitoring data in demonstrating successful re-establishment of the species. This provides a rare empirical example that the adaptive potential of a locally extinct population can be maintained during genetically informed ex-situ conservation breeding and reintroduction into the wild. Strategies to improve biodiversity restoration via ex-situ conservation should include genetic-based captive breeding and longitudinal monitoring of standing genomic variation in reintroduced populations.

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