Population diversity and relatedness in sugarbirds (Promeropidae : Promerops spp.)

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Haworth, Evan S.
Cunningham, Michael J.
Tjorve, Kathleen M. Calf

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

PeerJ

Abstract

Sugarbirds are a family of two socially-monogamous passerine species endemic to southern Africa. Cape and Gurney’s Sugarbird (Promerops cafer and P. gurneyi) differ in abundance, dispersion across their range and in the degree of sexual dimorphism in tail length, factors that affect breeding systems and potentially genetic diversity. According to recent data, P. gurneyi are in decline and revision of the species’ IUCN conservation status to a threatened category may be warranted. It is therefore necessary to understand genetic diversity and risk of inbreeding in this species. We used six polymorphic microsatellite markers and one mitochondrial gene (ND2) to compare genetic diversity in P. cafer from Cape Town and P. gurneyi from Golden Gate Highlands National Park, sites at the core of each species distribution. We describe novel universal avian primers which amplify the entire ND2 coding sequence across a broad range of bird orders. We observed high mitochondrial and microsatellite diversity in both sugarbird populations, with no detectable inbreeding and large effective population sizes.

Description

Keywords

Conservation genetics, Molecular ecology, Ornithology, Phylogeography, Population genetics, Sexual selection, Gene amplification, Genetic variability, Inbreeding, Microsatellite markers, Mitochondrial gene, Species distribution, Effective population size

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Haworth, E.S., Cunningham, M.J. & Tjorve, K.M.C. Population diversity and relatedness in Sugarbirds (Promeropidae: Promerops spp.). PeerJ 6:e5000; DOI 10.7717/peerj.5000.