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Moving from trends to benchmarks by using regression tree analysis to find inbreeding thresholds in a critically endangered bird
Authors:Alison M Flanagan  Bryce Masuda  Catherine E Grueber  Jolene T Sutton
Institution:1. Hawaii Endangered Bird Conservation Program, Institute for Conservation Research, San Diego Zoo Global, P.O. Box 39, Volcano, HI, 96785 U.S.A.;2. School of Life and Environmental Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2006 Australia;3. Department of Biology, University of Hawaii at Hilo, Hilo, HI, 96720 U.S.A.
Abstract:Understanding how inbreeding affects endangered species in conservation breeding programs is essential for their recovery. The Hawaiian Crow (‘Alalā) (Corvus hawaiiensis) is one of the world's most endangered birds. It went extinct in the wild in 2002, and, until recent release efforts starting in 2016, nearly all of the population remained under human care for conservation breeding. Using pedigree inbreeding coefficients (F), we evaluated the effects of inbreeding on Hawaiian Crow offspring survival and reproductive success. We used regression tree analysis to identify the level of inbreeding (i.e., inbreeding threshold) that explains a substantial decrease in ‘Alalā offspring survival to recruitment. Similar to a previous study of inbreeding in ‘Alalā, we found that inbreeding had a negative impact on offspring survival but that parental (vs. artificial) egg incubation improved offspring survival to recruitment. Furthermore, we found that inbreeding did not substantially affect offspring reproductive success, based on the assumption that offspring that survive to adulthood breed with distantly related mates. Our novel application of regression tree analysis showed that offspring with inbreeding levels exceeding F = 0.098 were 69% less likely to survive to recruitment than more outbred offspring, providing a specific threshold value for ongoing population management. Our results emphasize the importance of assessing inbreeding depression across all life history stages, confirm the importance of prioritizing parental over artificial egg incubation in avian conservation breeding programs, and demonstrate the utility of regression tree analysis as a tool for identifying inbreeding thresholds, if present, in any pedigree-managed population.
Keywords:conservation breeding  endangered species  fitness  inbreeding depression  pedigree inbreeding coefficients  regression trees  aptitud  árbol de regresión  coeficientes de linaje endogámico  depresión endogámica  especie en peligro  reproducción para la conservación
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