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Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZ Amphibian Program Office Materials produced by: R. Andrew Odum, Curat Department of Herpeto Toledo Zoological Soc

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Page 1: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Managed Breeding for Conservation:Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations

Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA

Amphibian Program Officer

Materials produced by:

R. Andrew Odum, CuratorDepartment of HerpetologyToledo Zoological Society

Page 2: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Why do we maintain records?

Page 3: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Records are kept…

• To manage a collection• To manage multiple collections in

coordination (population management)

• To learn about the animals in our charges (Do Science)

Page 4: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Records are kept…

To communicate

Records are kept as part of our responsibilities

for the animals in our charges

Page 5: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Data for Collection Management

• Identifiers• Sex• Parentage • Where are they• Who are they with• What they did while they were here• Husbandry• Medical

Page 6: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Data for population management

• Genetic – parentage

• Demographic – Sex

– Location

– Immigration

– Emigration

– Births

– Deaths

Page 7: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

• Genetic Data

• Demographic Data

Records for Population Management

Genetic data is most

important!No!

Demographic data is most important!

You guys sound like a bunch of

treefrogs! They are both

important!

Page 8: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Minimal Data Set

• How Obtained (demographic)

• Arrival Data (demographic)

• Sex (demographic)

• Birth Date (demographic)

• Parents (genetic)

Page 9: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Minimal Data Set

• Death date (demographic)

• Departure data (demographic)

• Specimen Identification (acc. #, pit tag, photograph, etc.)

Page 10: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Why do we cooperatively manage populations?

• For preservation of genetic diversity (GD) for the future (The Ark)

• For future reintroduction

• To efficiently utilize captive resources

Page 11: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Preserve Gene Diversity

Maintain a specific amount of Gene Diversity (GD) for a specific amount of

time

e.g. 90% for 100 years

THE ARK

Page 12: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

SPARKS

Page 13: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

PM-2000

Page 14: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Managed vs. Unmanaged

Arabian oryx• N = 13 in 1965• 10 founders • N = 416 in 1995• Stable• 92% gene diversity• Ne/N = 0.30• Mean Inbreeding=0.07

Markhor• N = 35 in 1965• 11 founders• N = 81 in 1995• Unstable• 86% gene diversity• Ne/N = 0.07• Mean Inbreeding=0.19

Page 15: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

All populations fluctuate:stable populations fluctuate little.

100 @ 10% 100 @ 50%x 0.90 = 90 x 0.50 = 50

x 1.10 = 99 x 1.50 = 75

x 0.90 = 89 x 0.50 = 38

x 1.10 = 98 x 1.50 = 56

x 0.90 = 88 x 0.50 = 28

x 1.10 = 97 x 1.50 = 42

Good years don’t cancel bad years

Page 16: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

Year

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Po

pu

lati

on

Siz

e10% Annual Fluctuation

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Page 17: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew
Page 18: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Projection of dolphin population: Initial N = 100; K = 200

Page 19: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Projection of dolphin population: Initial N = 10; K = 20

Page 20: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Carrying Capacity (N)Founders

Expansion Phase

Maintenance Phase

N

Tim

e

Page 21: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

• Nt = Nt‑1 + (B – D) + (I – E)

Factors that effect N from one census to the next

Tomorrow Today

Page 22: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Loss of Gene Diversity by Drift

The problem with small populations

AB CD

AD BD

AD

DB

Unrelated Animals

Allele C is lost

Page 23: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Loss of gene diversity due to drift

1000500

250

100

5010

Generation

% G

ene

Div

ersi

ty

N0

20

40

60

80

100

0 20 40 60 80 100

Page 24: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Inbreeding

• Mating between relatives

• Reduces gene diversity (GD)

• Greatly increases probability of expressing deleterious alleles

• Reversible

I love my cousin

Page 25: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Inbreeding

1 2

3 4

5 6

Unrelated Animals

Non-inbred offspring

Inbred offspring

Page 26: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Inbreeding Depression

Inbreeding Depression Expressed by XX

Following deleterious allele X through a pedigree

AB CX

AX BX

XB XX

A

B

XX

XXX

B

Unrelated Animals

Non-inbred offspring

Inbred offspring

X is a rare deleterious allele

Page 27: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Inbreeding reduces fitnessLook What I Made Now!

Page 28: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Inbred vs. Non-Inbred Crested Wood Partridges at MN Zoo

• 8% reduction in egg volume

• 10% reduction in egg weight

• 20% reduction in hatch rate

• 51% reduction in 30 day survival

• Inbred birds have 41% more medical notes than do their non-inbred counterparts!

Page 29: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Inbreeding is Reversible

If an inbred animal is bred with an unrelated animal, the resulting

offspring are not inbred

Outbreeding

Page 30: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

OutbreedingUnrelated Animals

Non-inbred offspring

Inbred #5 & #6

Unrelated Female

Non-Inbred Offspring

1 2

3 4

5 6 7

8

8 is not inbred, but GD is lost

Page 31: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

The Bad vs. The Good

• Small populations• Few breeders• Isolationist, possessive

management• Little or no genetic

management• Poor records

• Larger populations• More breeders• Cooperative

management• Careful genetic

management• Good records

Page 32: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Population Management Goals

• Maintain 90% gene diversity for 100 years

• Defined target population size– Founders vs. offspring

• Stable numbers– Stable age distribution

• Avoid inbreeding, drift

• Maximize Ne/N

Page 33: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

How is managed breeding achieved?

• data collected

• compiled at institution - ARKS IV

• compiled internationally - ISIS (future = ZIMS)

• polished by studbook keeper - SPARKS

• management recommendations - PM2000

• population modeling - VORTEX

Page 34: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Data to collect

• Provenance

• Genetic – Parentage

• Demographic – Gender– Birth/capture date– Immigration– Emigration– Births/Breeding behavior/Development– Deaths

Page 35: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew
Page 36: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Studbooks

• 300 Population Management Plans (PMPs)– Designated Population Manager keeps studbook

and makes management recommendations

• 90 Species Survival Plans (SSPs)– Species Coordinator & Management Group

• elected committee, outside advisors

– Established genetic goals for 50-100 years– Participation required of AZA member zoos– Field Conservation integral to program

Page 37: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

1. Quantify InbreedingThe Inbreeding Coefficient (F)

F = probability that homologous alleles at a random locus are

“identical by descent”

How to Make Breeding Recommendations?

Page 38: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Inbreeding CoefficientF=0

F= 0

F = 0.25

AB CX

AX BX

XB XX

Inbreeding Coefficients of a Simple Pedigree

Page 39: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

2. Select breeding pairs using the principle of inbreeding coefficient to

determine relatedness

Kinship

How to Make Breeding Recommendations?

Page 40: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

How related are we?Kinship

Kinship Coefficients of a Simple Pedigree

1 2

3 4

5 6

H H

F=0

F= 0

F = 0.25

F = 0.375

k= 0 between #1 and #2

k= 0.25 between #3 and #4

k= 0.375 between #5 and #6

Hypothetical cross of #5 & #6

Page 41: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

3. Calculate Mean Kinship:

the average of all the kinships of an animal to the rest of the population

How to Make Breeding Recommendations?

Page 42: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

MK of PedigreeALL ANIMALS LIVING

MK=0.225

MK=0.3375

MK=0.3875

1 2

3 4

5 6 7

8

#7 is the most important animal

MK=0.4125

MK=0.05

MK=0.2275

Page 43: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Mean Kinship

• Determines Best Pairings

• Determines Animals to Surplus

Page 44: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew
Page 45: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew
Page 46: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew
Page 47: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Incomplete data

• May remove animals from analysis process

• May create errors in analysis

• May prevent analysis

Page 48: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Incorrect data

• May create significant errors in analysis

• Usually hurts captive population

Page 49: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

The Future: Applying Our Knowledge

• Cooperation among institutions• Larger populations, backup• More breeders• Careful genetic management• Population planning• Group management• Good records

Page 50: Managed Breeding for Conservation: Sustainability of Ex Situ Populations Kevin Zippel - CBSG/WAZA Amphibian Program Officer Materials produced by: R. Andrew

Population Management is Balanced on Good Records

Husbandry

Demography Genetics

GOOD RECORDS