Conservation genetics is an interdisciplinary subfield of Population Genetics that aims to understand the dynamics of genes in populations principally to avoid extinction. Therefore, it applies genetic methods to the conservation and restoration of biodiversity. Researchers involved in conservation genetics come from a variety of fields including population genetics, molecular ecology, biology, evolutionary biology, and systematics. Genetic diversity
is one of the three fundamental levels of biodiversity, so it is
directly important in conservation. Genetic variability influences both
the health and long-term survival of populations because decreased
genetic diversity has been associated with reduced fitness, such as high juvenile mortality, diminished population growth, reduced immunity, and ultimately, higher extinction risk.
Genetic diversity
Genetic diversity is the variability of genes in a species. A number of means can express the level of genetic diversity: observed heterozygosity, expected heterozygosity, the mean number of alleles per locus, or the percentage of polymorphic loci.
Importance of genetic diversity
Genetic diversity
determines the potential fitness of a population and ultimately its
long-term persistence, because genes encode phenotypic information.
Extinction risk has been associated with low genetic diversity and
several researchers have documented reduced fitness in populations with
low genetic diversity. For example, low heterozigosity has been
associated with low juvenile survival, reduced population growth, low
body size, and diminished adult lifespan.
Heterozygosity, a fundamental measurement of genetic diversity in population genetics,
plays an important role in determining the chance of a population
surviving environmental change, novel pathogens not previously
encountered, as well as the average fitness of a population over
successive generations. Heterozygosity is also deeply connected, in population genetics theory, to population size
(which itself clearly has a fundamental importance to conservation).
All things being equal, small populations will be less heterozygous -
across their whole genomes - than comparable, but larger, populations.
This lower heterozygosity (i.e. low genetic diversity) renders small
populations more susceptible to the challenges mentioned above.
In a small population, over successive generations and without gene flow, the probability of mating with close relatives becomes very high, leading to inbreeding depression
- a reduction in fitness of the population. The reduced fitness of the
offspring of closely-related individuals is fundamentally tied to the
concept of heterozygosity, as the offspring of these kinds of pairings
are, by necessity, less heterozygous (more homozygous) across their
whole genomes than outbred individuals. A diploid individual with the
same maternal and paternal grandfather, for example, will have a much
higher chance of being homozygous at any loci inherited from the
paternal copies of each of their parents' genomes than would an
individual with unrelated maternal and paternal grandfathers (each
diploid individual inherits one copy of their genome from their mother
and one from their father).
High homozygosity (low heterozygosity) reduces fitness because it
exposes the phenotypic effects of recessive alleles at homozygous
sites. Selection can favour the maintenance of alleles which reduce the
fitness of homozygotes, the textbook example being the sickle-cell
beta-globin allele, which is maintained at high frequencies in
populations where malaria is endemic due to the highly adaptive
heterozygous phenotype (resistance to the malarial parasite, Plasmodium falciparum).
Low genetic diversity also reduces the opportunities for chromosomal crossover during meiosis
to create new combinations of alleles on chromosomes, effectively
increasing the average length of unrecombined tracts of chromosomes
inherited from parents. This in turn reduces the efficacy of selection,
across successive generations, to remove fitness-reducing alleles and
promote fitness-enhancing allelels from a population. (A simple
hypothetical example would be two adjacent genes - A and B - on the same
chromosome in an individual. If the allele at A promotes fitness "one
point", while the allele at B reduces fitness "one point", but the two
genes are inherited together, then selection can't favour the allele at A
while penalising the allele at B - the fitness balance is "zero
points". Recombination can swap out alternative alleles at A and B,
allowing selection to promote the optimal alleles to the optimal
frequencies in the population - but only if there are alternative
alleles to choose between!)
The fundamental connection between genetic diversity and population size in population genetics theory can be clearly seen in the classic population genetics measure of genetic diversity, the Watterson estimator, in which genetic diversity is measured as a function of effective population size and mutation rate.
Given the relationship between population size, mutation rate, and
genetic diversity, it is clearly important to recognise populations at
risk of losing genetic diversity before problems arise as a result of
the loss of that genetic diversity. Once lost, genetic diversity can
only be restored by mutation and gene flow.
If a species is already on the brink of extinction there will likely
be no populations to use to restore diversity by gene flow, and any
given population will (by definition) be small and therefore diversity
will accumulate in that population by mutation much more slowly than it
would in a comparable, but bigger, population (since there are fewer
individuals whose genomes are mutating in a smaller population than a
bigger population).
Contributors to extinction
- Inbreeding and inbreeding depression.
- The accumulation of deleterious mutations
- A decrease in frequency of heterozygotes in a population, or heterozygosity, which decreases a species' ability to evolve to deal with change in the environment.
- Outbreeding depression
- Fragmented populations
- Taxonomic uncertainties, which can lead to a reprioritization of conservation efforts
- Genetic drift as the main evolutionary process, instead of natural selection
- Management units within species
Techniques
Specific
genetic techniques are used to assess the genomes of a species
regarding specific conservation issues as well as general population
structure. This analysis can be done in two ways, with current DNA of individuals or historic DNA.
Techniques for analysing the differences between individuals and populations include
- Alloenzymes
- Random fragment length polymorphisms
- Amplified fragment length polymorphisms
- Random amplification of polymorphic DNA
- Single strand conformation polymorphism
- Minisatellites
- Microsatellites
- Single-nucleotide polymorphisms
- Dna Sequence
These different techniques focus on different variable areas of the
genomes within animals and plants. The specific information that is
required determines which techniques are used and which parts of the
genome are analysed. For example, mitochondrial DNA
in animals has a high substitution rate, which makes it useful for
identifying differences between individuals. However, it is only
inherited in the female line, and the mitochondrial genome is relatively
small. In plants, the mitochondrial DNA has very high rates of
structural mutations, so is rarely used for genetic markers, as the chloroplast genome can be used instead. Other sites in the genome that are subject to high mutation rates such as the major histocompatibility complex, and the microsatellites and minisatellites are also frequently used.
These techniques can provide information on long-term
conservation of genetic diversity and expound demographic and ecological
matters such as taxonomy.
Another technique is using historic DNA for genetic analysis.
Historic DNA is important because it allows geneticists to understand
how species reacted to changes to conditions in the past. This is a key
to understanding the reactions of similar species in the future.
Techniques using historic DNA include looking at preserved remains found in museums and caves.
Museums are used because there is a wide range of species that are
available to scientists all over the world. The problem with museums is
that, historical perspectives are important because understanding how
species reacted to changes in conditions in the past is a key to
understanding reactions of similar species in the future. Evidence found in caves provides a longer perspective and does not disturb the animals.
Another technique that relies on specific genetics of an
individual is noninvasive monitoring, which uses extracted DNA from
organic material that an individual leaves behind, such as a feather. This too avoids disrupting the animals and can provide information about the sex, movement, kinship and diet of an individual.
Other more general techniques can be used to correct genetic
factors that lead to extinction and risk of extinction. For example,
when minimizing inbreeding and increasing genetic variation multiple
steps can be taken. Increasing heterozygosity through immigration, increasing the generational interval through cryopreservation or breeding from older animals, and increasing the effective population size through equalization of family size all helps minimize inbreeding and its effects. Deleterious alleles arise through mutation, however certain recessive ones can become more prevalent due to inbreeding. Deleterious mutations that arise from inbreeding can be removed by purging, or natural selection. Populations raised in captivity with the intent of being reintroduced in the wild suffer from adaptations to captivity.
Inbreeding depression, loss of genetic diversity, and genetic
adaptation to captivity are disadvantageous in the wild, and many of
these issues can be dealt with through the aforementioned techniques
aimed at increasing heterozygosity. In addition creating a captive
environment that closely resembles the wild and fragmenting the
populations so there is less response to selection also help reduce
adaptation to captivity.
Solutions to minimize the factors that lead to extinction and
risk of extinction often overlap because the factors themselves overlap.
For example, deleterious mutations are added to populations through
mutation, however the deleterious mutations conservation biologists are
concerned with are ones that are brought about by inbreeding, because
those are the ones that can be taken care of by reducing inbreeding.
Here the techniques to reduce inbreeding also help decrease the
accumulation of deleterious mutations.
Applications
These
techniques have wide ranging applications. One application of these
specific molecular techniques is in defining species and sub-species of
salmonids. Hybridization
is an especially important issue in salmonids and this has wide ranging
conservation, political, social and economic implications. In Cutthroat
Trout mtDNA and alloenzyme analysis, hybridization between native and
non-native species was shown to be one of the major factors contributing
to the decline in their populations. This led to efforts to remove some
hybridized populations so native populations could breed more readily.
Cases like these impact everything from the economy of local fishermen
to larger companies, such as timber. Specific molecular techniques led
to a closer analysis of taxonomic relationships, which is one factor
that can lead to extinctions if unclear.
Implications
New
technology in conservation genetics has many implications for the
future of conservation biology. At the molecular level, new technologies
are advancing. Some of these techniques include the analysis of minisatellites and MHC.
These molecular techniques have wider effects from clarifying taxonomic
relationships, as in the previous example, to determining the best
individuals to reintroduce to a population for recovery by determining
kinship. These effects then have consequences that reach even further.
Conservation of species has implications for humans in the economic,
social, and political realms.
In the biological realm increased genotypic diversity has been shown to
help ecosystem recovery, as seen in a community of grasses which was
able to resist disturbance to grazing geese through greater genotypic
diversity.
Because species diversity increases ecosystem function, increasing
biodiversity through new conservation genetic techniques has wider
reaching effects than before.
A short list of studies a conservation geneticist may research include:
- Phylogenetic classification of species, subspecies, geographic races, and populations, and measures of phylogenetic diversity and uniqueness.
- Identifying hybrid species, hybridization in natural populations, and assessing the history and extent of introgression between species.
- Population genetic structure of natural and managed populations, including identification of Evolutionary Significant Units (ESUs) and management units for conservation.
- Assessing genetic variation within a species or population, including small or endangered populations, and estimates such as effective population size (Ne).
- Measuring the impact of inbreeding and outbreeding depression, and the relationship between heterozygosity and measures of fitness (see Fisher's fundamental theorem of natural selection).
- Evidence of disrupted mate choice and reproductive strategy in disturbed populations.
- Forensic applications, especially for the control of trade in endangered species.
- Practical methods for monitoring and maximizing genetic diversity during captive breeding programs and re-introduction schemes, including mathematical models and case studies.
- Conservation issues related to the introduction of genetically modified organisms.
- The interaction between environmental contaminants and the biology and health of an organism, including changes in mutation rates and adaptation to local changes in the environment (e.g. industrial melanism).
- New techniques for noninvasive genotyping.