Genomic signatures of bottleneck and founder effects in dingoes

Author:

Kumar Manoharan1,Conroy Gabriel23,Ogbourne Steven2,Cairns Kylie45,Borburgh Liesbeth3,Subramanian Sankar12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Science, Technology, and Engineering The University of the Sunshine Coast Moreton Bay Queensland Australia

2. Centre for Bioinnovation The University of the Sunshine Coast Sippy Downs Queensland Australia

3. School of Science, Technology, and Engineering The University of the Sunshine Coast Sippy Downs Queensland Australia

4. Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences UNSW Australia Sydney New South Wales Australia

5. Centre for Ecosystem Science, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences UNSW Australia Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractDingoes arrived in Australia during the mid‐Holocene and are the top‐order terrestrial predator on the continent. Although dingoes subsequently spread across the continent, the initial founding population(s) could have been small. We investigated this hypothesis by sequencing the whole genomes of three dingoes and also obtaining the genome data from nine additional dingoes and 56 canines, including wolves, village dogs and breed dogs, and examined the signatures of bottlenecks and founder effects. We found that the nucleotide diversity of dingoes was low, 36% less than highly inbred breed dogs and 3.3 times lower than wolves. The number of runs of homozygosity (RoH) segments in dingoes was 1.6–4.7 times higher than in other canines. While examining deleterious mutational load, we observed that dingoes carried elevated ratios of nonsynonymous‐to‐synonymous diversities, significantly higher numbers of homozygous deleterious Single Nucleotide Variants (SNVs), and increased numbers of loss of function SNVs, compared to breed dogs, village dogs, and wolves. Our findings can be explained by bottlenecks and founder effects during the establishment of dingoes in mainland Australia. These findings highlight the need for conservation‐based management of dingoes and the need for wildlife managers to be cognisant of these findings when considering the use of lethal control measures across the landscape.

Funder

University of the Sunshine Coast

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

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

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