A novel technique for estimating age and demography of long‐lived seabirds (genus Pterodroma) using an epigenetic clock for Gould's petrel (Pterodroma leucoptera)

Author:

Roman Lauren12ORCID,Mayne Benjamin3ORCID,Anderson Chloe3,Kim Yuna4,O'Dwyer Terence5,Carlile Nicholas6

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies University of Tasmania, Battery Point Hobart Tasmania Australia

2. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Environment, Battery Point Hobart Tasmania Australia

3. Environomics Future Science Platform, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Indian Ocean Marine Research Centre Crawley Western Australia Australia

4. Dr Kim's Conservation Solutions Sydney New South Wales Australia

5. Gadfly Ecological Services Brisbane Queensland Australia

6. Department of Climate Change, Energy, The Environment and Water Parramatta New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the demography of wildlife populations is a key component for ecological research, and where necessary, supporting the conservation and management of long‐lived animals. However, many animals lack phenological changes with which to determine individual age; therefore, gathering this fundamental information presents difficulties. More so for species that are rare, highly mobile, migratory and those that reside in inaccessible habitats. Until recently, the primary method to measure demography is through labour intensive mark‐recapture approaches, necessitating decades of effort for long‐lived species. Gadfly petrels (genus: Pterodroma) are one such taxa that are overrepresented with threatened and declining species, and for which numerous aspects of their ecology present challenges for research, monitoring and recovery efforts. To overcome some of these challenges, we developed the first DNA methylation (DNAm) demography technique to estimate the age of petrels, using the epigenetic clock of Gould's petrels (Pterodroma leucoptera). We collected reference blood samples from known‐aged Gould's petrels at a long‐term monitored population on Cabbage Tree Island, Australia. Epigenetic ages were successfully estimated for 121 individuals ranging in age from zero (fledgling) to 30 years of age, showing a mean error of 2.24 ± 0.17 years between the estimated and real age across the population. This is the first development of an epigenetic clock using multiplex PCR sequencing in a bird. This method enables demography to be measured with relative accuracy in a single sampling trip. This technique can provide information for emerging demographic risks that can mask declines in long‐lived seabird populations and be applied to other Pterodroma populations.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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