1. Interbreeding among South American camelids threatens species integrity.
- Author
-
Varas, Valeria, Vásquez, Juan Pablo, Rivera, Romina, Longo, Andrea, Valdecantos, Pablo A., Wheeler, Jane C., Johnson, Warren E., and Marín, Juan Carlos
- Subjects
- *
INTROGRESSION (Genetics) , *BREEDING , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *GENE flow , *ALPACA , *INTEGRITY - Abstract
Selective breeding of the guanaco and vicuña indisputably led to the domestic llama and alpaca. However, the place, time and process of domestication remain poorly documented, exacerbated by increased evidence of historic and recent introgression among both domestic populations, especially those involving alpaca. Here, we report the first comprehensive assessment of patterns of microsatellite variation of 13 polymorphic microsatellites in 797 individuals representing 4 species and 2 subspecies to estimate historic and ongoing patterns of gene flow. Our results confirm that llamas were domesticated almost exclusively from the northern subspecies of guanaco (Lama guanicoe cacsilensis), but cluster analyses did not support previous findings that alpacas are solely derived from the northern subspecies of vicuña (Vicugna mensalis), with some more-recent admixture with southern populations. We also confirmed continued gene flow between llama and alpaca, and found evidence for crosses between presumably feral llamas and guanacos in northern Chile. Our results highlight the need to develop and test more-accurate markers and tools for assessing the genetic heritage of individuals, to link phenotypic variation with genetic ancestry, and to conserve historic patterns of unique variation among both the wild and domestic populations. • The dominant herbivores of the arid and semi-arid habitats of South America include wild and domestic species. • The genetic and phenotypic integrity of the domestic llama and alpaca are increasingly being threatened by interbreeding. • Loss of vicuña genetic signal in alpaca is due to hybridization and introgression among South American camelids. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF