Data from: Rapid genetic and morphologic divergence between captive and wild populations of the endangered Leon Springs pupfish, Cyprinodon bovinus

Main Authors: Black, Andrew, Seears, Heidi A., Hollenbeck, Christoper M., Samollow, Paul B., Black, Andrew N., Hollenbeck, Christopher M.
Format: info dataset Journal
Terbitan: , 2017
Subjects:
Online Access: https://zenodo.org/record/4956961
ctrlnum 4956961
fullrecord <?xml version="1.0"?> <dc schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><creator>Black, Andrew</creator><creator>Seears, Heidi A.</creator><creator>Hollenbeck, Christoper M.</creator><creator>Samollow, Paul B.</creator><creator>Black, Andrew N.</creator><creator>Hollenbeck, Christopher M.</creator><date>2017-01-27</date><description>The Leon Springs pupfish (Cyprinodon bovinus) is an endangered species currently restricted to a single desert spring and a separate captive habitat in southwestern North America. Following establishment of the captive population from wild stock in 1976, the wild population has undergone natural population size fluctuations, intentional culling to purge genetic contamination from an invasive congener (Cyprinodon variegatus) and augmentation/replacement of wild fish from the captive stock. A severe population decline following the most recent introduction of captive fish prompted us to examine whether the captive and wild populations have differentiated during the short time they have been isolated from one another. If so, the development of divergent genetic and/or morphologic traits between populations could contribute to a diminished ability of fish from one location to thrive in the other. Examination of genomewide single nucleotide polymorphisms and morphologic variation revealed no evidence of residual C. variegatus characteristics in contemporary C. bovinus samples. However, significant genetic and morphologic differentiation was detected between the wild and captive populations, some of which might reflect local adaptation. Our results indicate that genetic and physical characteristics can diverge rapidly between isolated subdivisions of managed populations, potentially compromising the value of captive stock for future supplementation efforts. In the case of C. bovinus, our findings underscore the need to periodically inoculate the captive population with wild genetic material to help mitigate genetic, and potentially morphologic, divergence between them and also highlight the utility of parallel morphologic and genomic evaluation to inform conservation management planning.</description><description>GeneticsTwo GENEPOP files representing the filtered CB_GEN (1 990 SNPs) and CBV_GEN (3 313 SNPs) datasets. Sequential population factors for these files are: 1) DY, SNARRC and 2) DY, SNARRC, BL, respectively.MorphometricsTwo TPS files of raw Cartesian coordinates (CB_MORPH, CBV_MORPH), and the MORPHOJ project file used for morphometric analyses.</description><identifier>https://zenodo.org/record/4956961</identifier><identifier>10.5061/dryad.db40p</identifier><identifier>oai:zenodo.org:4956961</identifier><relation>doi:10.1111/mec.14028</relation><relation>url:https://zenodo.org/communities/dryad</relation><rights>info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess</rights><rights>https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode</rights><subject>Cyprinodon variegatus</subject><subject>ddRAD-seq</subject><subject>landmark-based geometric morphometrics</subject><subject>conservation breeding</subject><subject>Cyprinodon</subject><subject>Cyprinodon bovinus</subject><title>Data from: Rapid genetic and morphologic divergence between captive and wild populations of the endangered Leon Springs pupfish, Cyprinodon bovinus</title><type>Other:info:eu-repo/semantics/other</type><type>Other:dataset</type><recordID>4956961</recordID></dc>
format Other:info:eu-repo/semantics/other
Other
Other:dataset
Journal:Journal
Journal
author Black, Andrew
Seears, Heidi A.
Hollenbeck, Christoper M.
Samollow, Paul B.
Black, Andrew N.
Hollenbeck, Christopher M.
title Data from: Rapid genetic and morphologic divergence between captive and wild populations of the endangered Leon Springs pupfish, Cyprinodon bovinus
publishDate 2017
topic Cyprinodon variegatus
ddRAD-seq
landmark-based geometric morphometrics
conservation breeding
Cyprinodon
Cyprinodon bovinus
url https://zenodo.org/record/4956961
contents The Leon Springs pupfish (Cyprinodon bovinus) is an endangered species currently restricted to a single desert spring and a separate captive habitat in southwestern North America. Following establishment of the captive population from wild stock in 1976, the wild population has undergone natural population size fluctuations, intentional culling to purge genetic contamination from an invasive congener (Cyprinodon variegatus) and augmentation/replacement of wild fish from the captive stock. A severe population decline following the most recent introduction of captive fish prompted us to examine whether the captive and wild populations have differentiated during the short time they have been isolated from one another. If so, the development of divergent genetic and/or morphologic traits between populations could contribute to a diminished ability of fish from one location to thrive in the other. Examination of genomewide single nucleotide polymorphisms and morphologic variation revealed no evidence of residual C. variegatus characteristics in contemporary C. bovinus samples. However, significant genetic and morphologic differentiation was detected between the wild and captive populations, some of which might reflect local adaptation. Our results indicate that genetic and physical characteristics can diverge rapidly between isolated subdivisions of managed populations, potentially compromising the value of captive stock for future supplementation efforts. In the case of C. bovinus, our findings underscore the need to periodically inoculate the captive population with wild genetic material to help mitigate genetic, and potentially morphologic, divergence between them and also highlight the utility of parallel morphologic and genomic evaluation to inform conservation management planning.
GeneticsTwo GENEPOP files representing the filtered CB_GEN (1 990 SNPs) and CBV_GEN (3 313 SNPs) datasets. Sequential population factors for these files are: 1) DY, SNARRC and 2) DY, SNARRC, BL, respectively.MorphometricsTwo TPS files of raw Cartesian coordinates (CB_MORPH, CBV_MORPH), and the MORPHOJ project file used for morphometric analyses.
id IOS16997.4956961
institution ZAIN Publications
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library Cognizance Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies
library_id 5267
collection Cognizance Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies
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subject_area Multidisciplinary
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first_indexed 2022-06-06T05:24:38Z
last_indexed 2022-06-06T05:24:38Z
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