Genomic data revealed inbreeding despite a geographically connected stable effective population size since the Holocene in the protected Formosan Long-Arm Scarab beetle, Cheirotonus formosanus

Author:

Huang Jen-Pan1ORCID,Wu Shu-Ping2,Chen Wei-Yun1,Pham Guan Jie13,Kuan Yi-Hsiu1

Affiliation:

1. Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica , Taipei , Taiwan

2. Department of Earth and Life Science, University of Taipei , Taipei , Taiwan

3. Department of Biomedical Science and Environmental Biology, Kaohsiung Medical University , Kaohsiung , Taiwan

Abstract

Abstract Biodiversity conservation is a top priority in the face of global environmental change, and the practical restoration of biodiversity has emerged as a key objective. Nevertheless, the question of how to effectively contribute to biodiversity restoration and identify suitable systems for such efforts continues to present major challenges. By using genome-wide SNP data, our study revealed that populations from different mountain ranges of the Formosan Long-Arm Scarab beetle, a flagship species that receives strict protection, exhibited a single genetic cluster with no subdivision. Additionally, our result implied an association between the demographic history and historical fluctuations in climate and environmental conditions. Furthermore, we showed that, despite a stable and moderately sized effective population over recent history, all the individuals we studied exhibited signs of genetic inbreeding. We argued that the current practice of protecting the species as one evolutionarily significant unit remains the best conservation plan and that recent habitat change may have led to the pattern of significant inbreeding. We closed by emphasizing the importance of conservation genetic studies in guiding policy decisions and highlighting the potential of genomic data for identifying ideal empirical systems for genetic rescue, or assisted gene flow studies.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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