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Targeted gene flow for conservation
Authors:Ella Kelly  Ben L. Phillips
Affiliation:School of Biosciences, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia
Abstract:Anthropogenic threats often impose strong selection on affected populations, causing rapid evolutionary responses. Unfortunately, these adaptive responses are rarely harnessed for conservation. We suggest that conservation managers pay close attention to adaptive processes and geographic variation, with an eye to using them for conservation goals. Translocating pre‐adapted individuals into recipient populations is currently considered a potentially important management tool in the face of climate change. Targeted gene flow, which involves moving individuals with favorable traits to areas where these traits would have a conservation benefit, could have a much broader application in conservation. Across a species’ range there may be long‐standing geographic variation in traits or variation may have rapidly developed in response to a threatening process. Targeted gene flow could be used to promote natural resistance to threats to increase species resilience. We suggest that targeted gene flow is a currently underappreciated strategy in conservation that has applications ranging from the management of invasive species and their impacts to controlling the impact and virulence of pathogens.
Keywords:adaptation  assisted gene flow  assisted gene transfer  population management  rapid evolution  translocation  adaptació  n  evolució  n rá  pida  flujo gé  nico asistido  manejo de poblaciones  reubicació  n  transferencia gé  nica asistida
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