Missing history of a modern domesticate: Historical demographics and genetic diversity in farm-bred red fox populations

Author:

Rando Halie M12ORCID,Alexander Emmarie P1ORCID,Preckler-Quisquater Sophie3ORCID,Quinn Cate B34ORCID,Stutchman Jeremy T1,Johnson Jennifer L1ORCID,Bastounes Estelle R1,Horecka Beata5ORCID,Black Kristina L6,Robson Michael P2,Shepeleva Darya V7,Herbeck Yury E78,Kharlamova Anastasiya V7,Trut Lyudmila N7,Pauli Jonathan N6ORCID,Sacks Benjamin N39ORCID,Kukekova Anna V1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Department of Animal Sciences, , Urbana, IL 61801 , United States

2. Smith College Department of Computer Science, , Northampton, MA 01063 , United States

3. University of California Mammalian Ecology and Conservation Unit, Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, School of Veterinary Medicine, , Davis, CA 95616 , United States

4. Rocky Mountain Research Station National Genomics Center for Wildlife and Fish Conservation, USDA Forest Service, , Missoula, MT, United States

5. University of Life Sciences in Lublin Faculty of Animal Sciences and Bioeconomy, Institute of Biological Basis of Animal Production, , Lublin, Poland

6. University of Wisconsin Department of Forestry and Wildlife Ecology, , Madison, WI 53706 , United States

7. Institute of Cytology and Genetics of the Russian Academy of Sciences , Novosibirsk 630090 , Russia

8. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Koret School of Veterinary Medicine, , Rehovot 76100 , Israel

9. University of California Department of Population Health and Reproduction, School of Veterinary Medicine, , Davis, CA 95616 , United States

Abstract

Abstract The first record of captive-bred red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) dates to 1896 when a breeding enterprise emerged in the provinces of Atlantic Canada. Because its domestication happened during recent history, the red fox offers a unique opportunity to examine the genetic diversity of an emerging domesticated species in the context of documented historical and economic influences. In particular, the historical record suggests that North American and Eurasian farm-bred populations likely experienced different demographic trajectories. Here, we focus on the likely impacts of founder effects and genetic drift given historical trends in fox farming on North American and Eurasian farms. A total of 15 mitochondrial haplotypes were identified in 369 foxes from 10 farm populations that we genotyped (n = 161) or that were previously published. All haplotypes are endemic to North America. Although most haplotypes were consistent with eastern Canadian ancestry, a small number of foxes carried haplotypes typically found in Alaska and other regions of western North America. The presence of these haplotypes supports historical reports of wild foxes outside of Atlantic Canada being introduced into the breeding stock. These putative Alaskan and Western haplotypes were more frequently identified in Eurasian farms compared to North American farms, consistent with historical documentation suggesting that Eurasian economic and breeding practices were likely to maintain low-frequency haplotypes more effectively than in North America. Contextualizing inter- vs. intra-farm genetic diversity alongside the historical record is critical to understanding the origins of this emerging domesticate and the relationships between wild and farm-bred fox populations.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

USDA Hatch Project

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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