December
27, 2018, Uppsala University
Historical
collections of eastern gorilla specimens spanning the last 100 years were used
to provide a glimpse into the recent past of this critically endangered
species. Credit: Katerina Guschanski
The
critically endangered Grauer's gorilla has recently lost genetic diversity and
has experienced an increase in harmful mutations. These conclusions were
reached by an international team of researchers who sequenced eleven genomes
from eastern gorilla specimens collected up to 100 years ago, and compared
these with genomes from present-day individuals. The results are now published
in Current Biology.
Many wild
animals have declined in numbers over the past century, and scientists have
long worried that these declines have resulted in losses of genetic diversity,
increased inbreeding and an accumulation of harmful mutations. Although this
could lead to an even higher risk of extinction in threatened species,
investigating recent changes in genetic viability has been difficult. In a new
study, a team led by scientists from Uppsala University and the Swedish Museum
of Natural History has used specimens stored in museum collections to
analyse changes in eastern gorilla genomes over the past 100 years.
"We
found that the genetic diversity in
Grauer's gorilla has declined significantly in just a few generations,"
says Tom van der Valk, a Ph.D. student at Uppsala University in Sweden.
Grauer's
gorillas are found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and have declined by
80 per cent in recent decades due to poaching and habitat destruction. The
results from the comparison of historical and modern genomes show that
this decline has led to
increased inbreeding and a loss of genetic variation. This in turn means that
Grauer's gorillas have likely become less able to adapt to future disease
outbreaks and changes in their environment. In addition, the scientists
identified several mutations that are probably harmful and that have increased
in frequency over the past four to five generations as a consequence of the
decline in population size.
In the closely related mountain gorilla, however, the scientists did not
discover any significant genetic changes, suggesting that its genetic viability
has remained stable over the past 100 years.
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