4.6 Article

Genetic Diversity and Relatedness among Captive African Painted Dogs in North America

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12101463

Keywords

Lycaon pictus; African wild dog; Canidae; microsatellite; MHC; DLA-DRB1; D-loop; studbook; relatedness; genetic assessment; ex situ conservation

Funding

  1. Pittsburgh Zoo PPG Aquarium
  2. Penn State Beaver

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The study aimed to assess genetic variation and relatedness among North American captive African painted dogs, compare the data to wild and European populations, and facilitate the development of a global management plan. The results showed higher microsatellite heterozygosity but lower effective population size estimates compared to Europe. While there was no significant inbreeding overall, high relatedness values among individuals should be considered in future breeding programs.
African painted dogs (Lycaon pictus, APD) are highly endangered, with fewer than 7000 remaining in nature. Captive breeding programs can preserve a genetically diverse population and provide a source of individuals for reintroductions. However, most programs are initiated from few founders and suffer from low genetic diversity and inbreeding. The aims of this study were to use molecular markers to assess genetic variation, inbreeding, and relatedness among APDs in the North American captive population, to use these data to realign studbook records, and to compare these data to wild populations and to the European captive population to facilitate the development of a global management plan. We sequenced mitochondrial and major histocompatibility (MHC) class II loci and genotyped 14 microsatellite loci from 109 APDs from 34 institutions in North America. We identified three likely studbook errors and resolved ten cases of uncertain paternity. Overall, microsatellite heterozygosity was higher than reported in Europe, but effective population size estimates were lower. Mitochondrial sequence variation was extremely limited, and there were fewer MHC haplotypes than in Europe or the wild. Although the population did not show evidence of significant inbreeding overall, several individuals shared high relatedness values, which should be incorporated into future breeding programs.

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