Introgressive hybridisation between domestic pigs (Sus scrofa domesticus) and endemic Corsican wild boars (S. s. meridionalis): effects of human-mediated interventions
Owing to the intensified domestication process with artificial trait selection, introgressive hybridisation between domestic and wild species poses a management problem. Traditional free-range livestock husbandry, as practiced in Corsica and Sardinia, is known to facilitate hybridisation between wil...
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Zusammenfassung: | Owing to the intensified domestication process with artificial trait
selection, introgressive hybridisation between domestic and wild species
poses a management problem. Traditional free-range livestock husbandry, as
practiced in Corsica and Sardinia, is known to facilitate hybridisation
between wild boars and domestic pigs (Sus scrofa). Here, we assessed the
genetic distinctness and genome-wide domestic pig ancestry levels of the
Corsican wild boar subspecies S. s. meridionalis, with reference to its
Sardinian conspecifics, employing a genome-wide single nucleotide
polymorphism (SNP) assay and mitochondrial control region (mtCR)
haplotypes. We also assessed the reliance of morphological criteria and
the melanocortin-1 receptor (MC1R) coat colour gene to identify
individuals with domestic introgression. While Corsican wild boars showed
closest affinity to Sardinian and Italian wild boars compared to other
European populations based on principal component analysis, the
observation of previously undescribed mtCR haplotypes and high levels of
nuclear divergence (Weir’s 0.14) highlighted the genetic distinctness of
Corsican S. s. meridionalis. Across three complementary analyses of mixed
ancestry (i.e., STRUCTURE, PCADMIX, and ELAI), proportions of domestic pig
ancestry were estimated at 9.5% in Corsican wild boars, which was
significantly higher than in wild boars in Sardinia, where free-range pig
keeping was banned in 2012. Comparison of morphologically pure- and
hybrid-looking Corsican wild boars suggested a weak correlation between
morphological criteria and genome-wide domestic pig ancestry. The study
highlighted the usefulness of molecular markers to assess the direct
impacts of management practices on gene flow between domestic and wild
species. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.jq2bvq8bb |