Genotyping blastoderms of avian eggs

Author:

Teltscher Kim1ORCID,Kempenaers Bart1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ornithology Max Planck Institute for Biological Intelligence Seewiesen Germany

Abstract

AbstractUndeveloped eggs occur frequently in birds and are often considered infertile, and discarded. However, the majority of undeveloped eggs may in fact have been fertilised and embryos might have died at an early stage. Such eggs contain valuable information, for example about offspring sex and paternity, and level of inbreeding. Obtaining such information may also give insight into the patterns and causes of early embryo mortality. Here we describe a simple technique for removing embryo cells from the blastoderm to obtain DNA to genotype the offspring and unequivocally ascertain fertilisation status, while retaining the overlying perivitelline layer (PVL) for sperm counts over the entire membrane. We tested this method on freshly collected eggs (high‐quality material), as well as on eggs from abandoned clutches and unhatched eggs (potentially deteriorated material) of blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus). We sampled a total of 707 eggs from a wild population of blue tits, extracted DNA from the eggs' blastoderm using a Qiagen kit, and genotyped the samples with 14 polymorphic microsatellite markers, plus one sexing marker. Overall, we successfully genotyped 97% of all eggs. Our study is the most extensive dataset of genotyped undeveloped eggs to date and demonstrates that one can reliably genotype undeveloped fertile eggs as well as retain the PVL for observations of sperm and embryo cells.

Funder

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

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

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3. Why do eggs fail? Causes of hatching failure in threatened populations and consequences for conservation

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