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Título : Admixture Between Historically Isolated Mitochondrial Lineages in Captive Western Gorillas: Recommendations for Future Management
Autor : Soto Calderón, Iván Darío
Dew, J. Larry
Bergl, Richard A.
Jensen Seaman, Michael
Anthony, Nicola
metadata.dc.subject.*: Genome, Mitochondrial
Genoma Mitocondrial
Bayes Theorem
Teorema de Bayes
Genetic Variation
Variación Genética
Gorilla gorilla
Phylogeny
Filogenia
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Análisis de Secuencia de ADN
Animals, Zoo - genética
Animals, Zoo - genetics
Haplotypes
Haplotipos
Genetics, Population
Genética de Población
Conservation of Natural Resources
Conservación de los Recursos Naturales
Pedigree
Linaje
Fecha de publicación : 2015
Editorial : Oxford University Press For The American Genetic Association
Citación : Soto-Calderón ID, Dew JL, Bergl RA, Jensen-Seaman MI, Anthony NM. Admixture between historically isolated mitochondrial lineages in captive Western gorillas: recommendations for future management. J Hered. 2015 May-Jun;106(3):310-4. doi: 10.1093/jhered/esv006.
Resumen : ABSTRACT: Although captive populations of western gorilla have been maintained in the United States for over a century, little is known about the geographic origins and genetic composition of the current zoo population. Furthermore, although previous mitochondrial analyses have shown that free-range gorilla populations exhibit substantial regional differentiation, nothing is known of the extent to which this variation has been preserved in captive populations. To address these questions, we combined 379 pedigree records with data from 52 mitochondrial sequences to infer individual haplogroup affiliations, geographical origin of wild founders and instances of inter-breeding between haplogroups in the United States captive gorilla population. We show that the current captive population contains all major mitochondrial lineages found within wild western lowland gorillas. Levels of haplotype diversity are also comparable to those found in wild populations. However, the majority of captive gorilla matings have occurred between individuals with different haplogroup affiliations. Although restricting crosses to individuals within the same haplogroup would preserve the phylogeographic structure present in the wild, careful management of captive populations is required to minimize the risk of drift and inbreeding. However, when captive animals are released back into the wild, we recommend that efforts should be made to preserve natural phylogeographic structure.
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: 1465-7333
ISSN : 0022-1503
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1093/jhered/esv006
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