When DNA Becomes a Tool for Triaging Endangered Species

Inbred birds lead short, troubled lives, but new research reveals a way for scientists to help.

Inbred birds tend to get a raw deal in life. Bird populations with lower genetic diversity are less able to adapt to environmental change and stresses, and individuals that are inbred may have shorter wings, beaks that are less attractive to potential mates, or various other characteristics that make them less equipped to thrive in the wild. Some research has also found that inbred birds . Now, a study suggests a shorter lifespan is actually written into their DNA鈥攊nformation that could be valuable for researchers and conservationists.

To conduct the research, published last week in , a team from the University of East Anglia (UEA) in Norfolk, England, homed in on a bird that had come extremely close to extinction: The had dwindled to just 26 individuals in the '60s before its habitat was protected and it mounted a comeback. The researchers examined blood samples collected over 14 years from the population on Cousin Island near East Africa, focusing on pieces of DNA called telomeres.

Known to be a good predictor of lifespan, telomeres serve as protective caps on the ends of chromosomes, and they shorten with age and stress. The team found that inbred warblers had shorter telomeres than ones with greater genetic diversity. What鈥檚 more, telomeres were even shorter in warblers that had lived under the most stressful conditions, such as lack of food. (Because the environment on the island could be regularly monitored, the researchers knew exactly what pressures the birds experienced.) 鈥淭elomeres, they reflect everything鈥攅very stress you come across,鈥 says lead author Kat Bebbington, a PhD student in UEA鈥檚 School of Biological Sciences.

This finding points to a perilous situation: Inbred birds are inherently set up for a shorter lifespan, but when they鈥檙e in a challenging environment, their lives are likely to be shortened even more. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 really important for conservation,鈥 Bebbington says. 鈥淥ften the reason that populations are small in the first place is because of things like deforestation and lack of food and habitat. If these populations are also inbred, that鈥檚 a recipe for trouble.鈥

The team could identify the telomere effect even when birds didn鈥檛 display more obvious signs of inbreeding. And that鈥檚 the real significance of the study, says Susan Haig, senior scientist and wildlife ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Oregon. 鈥淚f you go in and birds are flying around, how are you supposed to know that there鈥檚 a problem?鈥 By looking at telomere length, researchers might now be able to quantify the extent of inbreeding. 鈥淚t helps put a finer point on the exact status of a population,鈥 Haig says.  

Haig thinks the discovery could benefit conservation efforts for endangered species with disparate populations, particularly those that haven鈥檛 been studied extensively. 鈥淭his tool could be useful for identifying which populations are suffering from inbreeding depression relative to the others,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t would help you to do a triage assessment of which populations are in need of most help immediately.鈥