4.6 Article

Close-kin methods to estimate census size and effective population size

Journal

FISH AND FISHERIES
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 273-293

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/faf.12615

Keywords

abundance; genetics; mark-recapture; parentage analysis; reproductive skew; siblings

Categories

Funding

  1. NOAA Fisheries Office of Science and Technology

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Research has found that genetic methods and close-kin mark-recapture methods differ in estimating population size, but combining the two can provide a better assessment of both ecological and evolutionary processes.
The last two decades have witnessed rapid developments and increasing interest in use of: (1) genetic methods to estimate effective population size (N-e) and (2) close-kin mark-recapture (CKMR) methods to estimate abundance based on the incidence of close relatives. Whereas N-e estimation methods have been applied to a wide range of taxa, all CKMR applications to date have been for aquatic species. These two fields of inquiry have developed largely independently, and this is unfortunate because deeper insights can be gained by joint evaluation of eco-evolutionary processes. In this synthesis, we use simple analytical models and simulated pedigree data to illustrate how various factors (life-history traits; patterns of variation in individual reproductive success; experimental design; stochasticity; marker type) can affect the performance of the estimators. We show that the N-e/N ratio and the probability of a close-kin match both depend on a vector of parental weights that specify relative probabilities that different individuals will produce offspring. Although age-specific vital rates are central to both methodologies, for CKMR they can potentially bias abundance estimates unless properly accounted for, whereas they represent the signals of genetic drift that N-e estimation methods depend upon. Coordinating N-e and CKMR estimation methods using the same or overlapping datasets would facilitate joint evaluation of both the ecological and evolutionary consequences of abundance.

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