Benefits of outcrossing and their implications for genetic management of an endangered species with mixed‐mating system

Author:

Rodger Yael S.1ORCID,Dillon Rebecca2,Monro Keyne1,Pavlova Alexandra1,Coates David J.2,Byrne Margaret2,Sunnucks Paul1

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Clayton Campus Monash University Clayton 3800 Victoria Australia

2. Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions Biodiversity Conservation Science Bentley 6102 Western Australia Australia

Abstract

Mixing gene pools in translocations can create populations with higher genetic diversity and evolutionary potential compared to single sources. However, the benefits of outcrossing on genetic rescue may depend on species' life history, notably mating systems. We assessed outcomes on growth and survival of different kinds of cross in a translocated population of the highly endangered mixed‐mating species Banksia brownii, established from multiple sources. We genetically assigned plants grown from field‐pollinated seed as of selfed, within‐source or between‐source (referring to the original source populations) cross types, and estimated proportion of heterozygous loci for each plant. We modeled the associations among genetic predictors (cross type, level of genetic diversity, and ancestry) and fitness proxies measured in glasshouse and field. At the translocation site, selfing rates were approximately 53–70% and crossing among sources was rare, both likely owing to different patterns of flowering among plants. Offspring of selfed plants were consistently smaller in volume in the glasshouse than were offspring from within‐source crosses. There was no evidence from the first 3 years that survival in the field was influenced by any predictor tested, but the smaller volume of selfed plants in the glasshouse and correlation of glasshouse size at 5 months with the size of the same plants at 3 years in the field suggest that more time may be needed to observe any effects of outcrossing on survival and fitness. Our results highlight the importance of monitoring mating systems, genetic diversity, and fitness data for evaluating translocation success and informing adaptive management.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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