EvolGenomics Journal Club: A Restriction-site Associated DNA sequencing approach for conservation genomics

We will discuss a study by Krohn et al. using a reduced representation genomic approach (RAD sequencing) to study the genetic diversity and evolutionary relationships of an endangered vole and other closely related desert-dwelling voles.

California vole in desert environment

California vole. Photo: Jerry Kirkhart.

Study

Jørn Henrik Sønstebø selected:

Conservation genomics of desert dwelling California voles (Microtus californicus) and implications for management of endangered Amargosa voles (Microtus californicus scirpensis)

Conservation Genetics (2018) 19:383–395

Abstract

  • Understanding population genetic structure and levels of genetic variation is critical for the conservation and management of imperiled populations, especially when reintroductions are planned.
  • We used restriction-site associated DNA (RAD) sequencing to study the genetic diversity and evolutionary relationships of the endangered Amargosa vole and other closely related desert-dwelling California voles. Specifically, we sought to determine how Amargosa voles are related to other California voles, how genetic variation is partitioned among subpopulations in wild Amargosa voles, and how much genetic variation is captured within a captive insurance colony of Amargosa voles.
  • Our multilocus nuclear dataset provides strong evidence that Amargosa voles are part of a northern clade of California voles. Amargosa voles have highly reduced genetic variation relative to other California voles, but do exhibit some sub-structure among sampled marshes. Captive Amargosa voles capture approximately half of the total genetic variation present in the wild Amargosa vole populations.
  • We discuss the management implications of our findings in light of reintroductions planned for Amargosa voles. Our study highlights the utility of reduced representation genomic approaches, like RADseq, to resolve relationships among small populations that are difficult to study with traditional markers due to low genetic variation and few individuals left in the wild.

Organizer

Marie Leys
Published Sep. 14, 2018 4:11 PM - Last modified Feb. 7, 2020 3:57 PM