Genomic insights into red squirrels in Scotland reveals loss of heterozygosity associated with extreme founder effects

Melissa M. Marr*, Emily Humble, Peter Lurz, Liam A. Wilson, Elspeth Milne, Katie M. Beckmann, Jeffrey Schoenebeck, Uva Yu Yan Fung, Andrew Kitchener, Kenny Kortland, Colin Edwards, Rob Ogden

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Working paperPreprint

Abstract / Description of output

Remnant populations of endangered species often have complex demographic histories associated with human impact. This can present challenges for conservation as the genetic status of these populations are often a-typical of natural populations, and may require bespoke management. The Eurasian red squirrel,Sciurus vulgaris (L., 1758), is endangered in the UK. Scotland represents a key stronghold, but Scottish populations have been subjected to intense anthropogenic influence, including wide-spread extirpations, reintroductions and competition from an invasive species. This study examined the genetic legacy of these events through whole genome resequencing of 106 red squirrels. Using SNP and genotype likelihood datasets, previously undetected population structure and patterns of gene-flow were uncovered. One off-shore island, three mainland Scottish populations, and a key east-coast migration corridor were observed. An abrupt historical population bottleneck related to extreme founder effects has led to a sever
Original languageEnglish
PublisherbioRxiv
Pages1-44
Number of pages44
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 13 Jul 2024

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