Landscape Genomics to Enable Conservation Actions: The California Conservation Genomics Project

Author:

Shaffer H Bradley123ORCID,Toffelmier Erin12,Corbett-Detig Russ B4,Escalona Merly4,Erickson Bjorn5,Fiedler Peggy6,Gold Mark7,Harrigan Ryan J28,Hodges Scott9,Luckau Tara K12,Miller Courtney12,Oliveira Daniel R12ORCID,Shaffer Kevin E3,Shapiro Beth1011,Sork Victoria L12,Wang Ian J1213

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California , Los Angeles, CA 90095 , USA

2. La Kretz Center for California Conservation Science, Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, University of California , Los Angeles, CA 90095 , USA

3. California Department of Fish and Wildlife, Fisheries Branch , West Sacramento, CA 95605 , USA

4. Department of Biomolecular Engineering, University of California, Santa Cruz , Santa Cruz, CA 95064 , USA

5. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service , Sacramento, CA 95825 , USA

6. Natural Reserve System, Office of the President, University of California , Oakland, CA 94607 , USA

7. California Natural Resources Agency , 1416 Ninth Street, Suite 1311, Sacramento, CA 95814 , USA

8. Center for Tropical Research, Institute for Environment and Sustainability, University of California , Los Angeles, CA 90095 , USA

9. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology, University of California , Santa Barbara, CA 93106 , USA

10. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz , Santa Cruz, CA 95064 , USA

11. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Santa Cruz , Santa Cruz, CA 95064 , USA

12. Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California , Berkeley, CA 94720 , USA

13. Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California , Berkeley, CA 94720 , USA

Abstract

Abstract The California Conservation Genomics Project (CCGP) is a unique, critically important step forward in the use of comprehensive landscape genetic data to modernize natural resource management at a regional scale. We describe the CCGP, including all aspects of project administration, data collection, current progress, and future challenges. The CCGP will generate, analyze, and curate a single high-quality reference genome and 100–150 resequenced genomes for each of 153 species projects (representing 235 individual species) that span the ecological and phylogenetic breadth of California’s marine, freshwater, and terrestrial ecosystems. The resulting portfolio of roughly 20 000 resequenced genomes will be analyzed with identical informatic and landscape genomic pipelines, providing a comprehensive overview of hotspots of within-species genomic diversity, potential and realized corridors connecting these hotspots, regions of reduced diversity requiring genetic rescue, and the distribution of variation critical for rapid climate adaptation. After 2 years of concerted effort, full funding ($12M USD) has been secured, species identified, and funds distributed to 68 laboratories and 114 investigators drawn from all 10 University of California campuses. The remaining phases of the CCGP include completion of data collection and analyses, and delivery of the resulting genomic data and inferences to state and federal regulatory agencies to help stabilize species declines. The aspirational goals of the CCGP are to identify geographic regions that are critical to long-term preservation of California biodiversity, prioritize those regions based on defensible genomic criteria, and provide foundational knowledge that informs management strategies at both the individual species and ecosystem levels.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biotechnology

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