conservation genetics Flashcards

1
Q

conservation of endangered species

A
  • in situ, by conserving entire habitat
  • ex situ, by translocating population to a new area (greater control over population, but expensive, small population size, animals may adapt to captivity)
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2
Q

genetic contributors to extinction

A
  • inbreeding depression
  • outbreeding depression
  • loss of genetic diversity
  • accumulation of deleterious mutations
  • adaptation to captivity
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3
Q

inbreeding depression

A
  • inbreeding increases probability of homozygosity for harmful deleterious alleles
  • most deleterious alleles are recessive and closely related parents share alleles
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4
Q

inbreeding

A
  • breeding between closely related individuals
  • more likely to occur in small populations, where there is high reproductive variance or where the sex ratio is skewed
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5
Q

outbreeding depression

A
  • parents from different populations/sub-species produce offspring with reduced fitness
  • breakdown of local adaptation, offspring not suited to either area
  • alleles not compatible, e.g. multiple alleles working together for species mimicry
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6
Q

adaptation to captivity

A
  • often used as last resort or to supplement wild population
  • natural and artificial selection adapts organism to captivity, reduces likelihood of successful reintroduction
  • directed and unconscious artificial selection
  • safe and abundant properties of captivity means organisms lose adaptations useful when there are a lack of resources/predators/parasites/diseases
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7
Q
A
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