| Literature DB >> 31839456 |
Pere Gelabert1, Marcela Sandoval-Velasco2, Aitor Serres3, Marc de Manuel3, Pere Renom3, Ashot Margaryan2, Josefin Stiller4, Toni de-Dios3, Qi Fang5, Shaohong Feng5, Santi Mañosa6, George Pacheco2, Manuel Ferrando-Bernal3, Guolin Shi7, Fei Hao7, Xianqing Chen8, Bent Petersen9, Remi-André Olsen10, Arcadi Navarro11, Yuan Deng5, Love Dalén12, Tomàs Marquès-Bonet13, Guojie Zhang14, Agostinho Antunes15, M Thomas P Gilbert16, Carles Lalueza-Fox17.
Abstract
As the only endemic neotropical parrot to have recently lived in the northern hemisphere, the Carolina parakeet (Conuropsis carolinensis) was an iconic North American bird. The last surviving specimen died in the Cincinnati Zoo in 1918 [1]. The cause of its extinction remains contentious: besides excessive mortality associated to habitat destruction and active hunting, their survival could have been negatively affected by its range having become increasingly patchy [2] or by the exposure to poultry pathogens [3, 4]. In addition, the Carolina parakeet showed a predilection for cockleburs, an herbaceous plant that contains a powerful toxin, carboxyatractyloside, or CAT [5], which did not seem to affect them but made the birds notoriously toxic to most predators [3]. To explore the demographic history of this bird, we generated the complete genomic sequence of a preserved specimen held in a private collection in Espinelves (Girona, Spain), as well as of a close extant relative, Aratinga solstitialis. We identified two non-synonymous genetic changes in two highly conserved proteins known to interact with CAT that could underlie a specific dietary adaptation to this toxin. Our genomic analyses did not reveal evidence of a dramatic past demographic decline in the Carolina parakeet; also, its genome did not exhibit the long runs of homozygosity that are signals of recent inbreeding and are typically found in endangered species. As such, our results suggest its extinction was an abrupt process and thus likely solely attributable to human causes.Entities:
Keywords: ancient genomics; extinction; ornithology; population genomics; toxic diet
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31839456 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.10.066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.900