Genetic rescue and inbreeding depression in Mexican wolves

Author:

Fredrickson Richard J1,Siminski Peter2,Woolf Melissa3,Hedrick Philip W1

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences, Arizona State UniversityTempe, AZ 85287-4501, USA

2. The Living Desert, Palm DesertCA 92260-6156, USA

3. Turner Endangered Species Fund, Ladder Ranch, CaballoNM 87931, USA

Abstract

Although inbreeding can reduce individual fitness and contribute to population extinction, gene flow between inbred but unrelated populations may overcome these effects. Among extant Mexican wolves ( Canis lupus baileyi ), inbreeding had reduced genetic diversity and potentially lowered fitness, and as a result, three unrelated captive wolf lineages were merged beginning in 1995. We examined the effect of inbreeding and the merging of the founding lineages on three fitness traits in the captive population and on litter size in the reintroduced population. We found little evidence of inbreeding depression among captive wolves of the founding lineages, but large fitness increases, genetic rescue, for all traits examined among F 1 offspring of the founding lineages. In addition, we observed strong inbreeding depression among wolves descended from F 1 wolves. These results suggest a high load of deleterious alleles in the McBride lineage, the largest of the founding lineages. In the wild, reintroduced population, there were large fitness differences between McBride wolves and wolves with ancestry from two or more lineages, again indicating a genetic rescue. The low litter and pack sizes observed in the wild population are consistent with this genetic load, but it appears that there is still potential to establish vigorous wild populations.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference39 articles.

1. Asa C. Miller P. Agnew M. Rivera A. R. Lindsey S. L. Callahan M. & Bauman K. In press. Relationship of inbreeding to sperm quality and reproductive success in Mexican Gray wolves ( Canis lupus baileyi ). Anim. Conserv.

2. Brown D.E The wolf in the southwest: the making of an endangered species. 1983 Tucson AZ:University of Arizona Press.

3. Burnham K.P& Anderson D.R Model selection and multimodel inference a practical information–theoretic approach. 2nd edn. 2002 New York NY:Springer Science.

4. Fredrickson R. F. 2007 Effects of inbreeding and outbreeding in Mexican and red wolves. PhD dissertation Arizona State University Tempe.

5. Reduced Heterozygosity Depresses Sperm Quality in Wild Rabbits, Oryctolagus cuniculus

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