Practical implementation of optimal management strategies in conservation programmes A mate selection method

The maintenance of genetic diversity is, from a genetic point of view, a key objective of conservation programmes. The selection of individuals contributing offspring and the decision of the mating scheme are the steps on which managers can control genetic diversity, specially on "ex situ" programmes. Previous studies have shown that the optimal management strategy is to look for the parents' contributions that yield minimum group coancestry (overall probability of identity by descent in the population) and, then, to arrange mating couples following minimum pairwise coancestry. However, physiological constraints make it necessary to account for mating restrictions when deciding the contributions and, therefore, these should be implemented in a single step along with the mating plan. In the present paper, a single-step method is proposed to optimise the management of a conservation programme when restrictions on the mating scheme exist. The performance of the method is tested by computer simulation. The strategy turns out to be as efficient as the two-step method, regarding both the genetic diversity preserved and the fitness of the population.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fernández, J., Toro, M. A., Caballero, A.
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Museu de Ciencies Naturals de Barcelona 2002
Subjects:Inbreeding, Genetic diversity, Genetic drift, Reproductive traits,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/1361
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/291236
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