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Conservation Genomic Analyses of the Endangered Masked Bobwhite Quail (Colinus Virginianus Ridgewayi)

Authors :
Gallery, Rachel
Badyaev, Alexander
Faircloth, Brant
Vargas, Karla Leonor
Gallery, Rachel
Badyaev, Alexander
Faircloth, Brant
Vargas, Karla Leonor
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The unparalleled rate at which biodiversity is disappearing around the globe has made conservation of imperiled populations an urgent but difficult task. Critical resources are increasingly limited, constraining effective conservation practices. Genetic distinctiveness is an important metric used to prioritize conservation efforts. The masked bobwhite (Colinus virginianus ridgwayi) is a peripheral population and genetically differentiated subspecies of the northern bobwhite. To generate data beneficial to conservation efforts for the endangered masked bobwhite, I used genomic sequencing methods to resolve fine scale evolutionary relationships among the masked bobwhite, Texas bobwhite, and Mexican subspecies of northern bobwhite. I analyzed thousands of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to elucidate genetic diversity patterns and population structure among subspecies, and I applied a maximum entropy approach to generate species distribution models (SDMs) to assess climate variables that affect the geographic distributions, to examine similarity among key subspecies’ habitats, and to project potential habitat suitability of key subspecies under present-day and future climate change scenarios. The results from this study suggest that C. v. ridgwayi, C. v texanus, and C. v. graysoni are more closely related to each other than to other Mexican subspecies and support the genetic distinctiveness of C. v. ridgwayi. SNP analyses suggest some genetic distinction between contemporary and historical samples of the masked bobwhite, which should be further explored since results rely on only one successful historical sample. SDM analyses to estimate climatic variables most important to current and future habitat quality for northern bobwhite showed that specific climate variables that contribute to current and future potential distribution of the northern bobwhite differ when modeling distribution at the species- versus subspecies-level. Also, the distribution of C. v. ridgw

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1328124021
Document Type :
Electronic Resource