Development of genetic markers for reproductive management of toucans

Author:

Coleman Jeffrey L.12ORCID,Wyffels Jennifer T.34,Penfold Linda M.5,Richardson Daryl6,Maddox J. Dylan1

Affiliation:

1. Negaunee Integrative Research Center Field Museum of Natural History Chicago Illinois USA

2. Department of Integrative Biology University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA

3. Center for Bioinformatics & Computational Biology University of Delaware Newark Delaware USA

4. Ripley's Aquariums Orlando Florida USA

5. South‐East Zoo Alliance for Reproduction & Conservation Yulee Florida USA

6. The Dallas World Aquarium Dallas Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractRetention of genetic diversity in successive generations is key to successful ex situ programs and will become increasingly important to restore wild populations of threatened animals. When animal genealogy is partly unknown or gaps exist in studbook records, the application of molecular resources facilitates informed breeding. Here, we apply molecular resources to an ex situ breeding population of toucans (Ramphastidae), a bird family zoos commonly maintain. Toucans face population declines from illegal poaching and habitat degradation. We developed novel microsatellite markers using blood samples from 15 Keel‐billed Toucans (Ramphastos sulfuratus Lesson 1830). Parentage of two individuals was known a priori, but possible sibship among 13 putative founders—including the parents—was unknown. We compared available avian heterologous and novel microsatellite markers to recover known relationships and reconstruct sibship. Eight of 61 heterologous markers amplified consistently and were polymorphic, but less so than the 18 novel markers. Known sibship (and three sibling pairs whose relatedness was unknown a priori) and paternity—though not maternity except in one case—were well‐recovered using both likelihood and pairwise relatedness methods, when incorporating novel but not heterologous markers. Zoo researchers seeking microsatellite primer sets for their breeding toucan populations will likely benefit from our heterologous markers, which can be leveraged both to assess relatedness and select breeding pairs. We recommend that zoo biologists rely on species‐specific primers and not optimize heterologous primers for toucan species without molecular resources. We conclude with a brief discussion of modern genotyping methods of interest to zoo researchers.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine

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