Low incidence of inbreeding in a long-lived primate population isolated for 75 years.
Anja WiddigLaura MunizMirjam MinknerYvonne BarthStefanie BleyAngelina Ruiz-LambidesOlaf JungeRoger MundryLars KulikPublished in: Behavioral ecology and sociobiology (2016)
When close relatives mate, offspring may suffer from such inbreeding, e.g., via lower survival and/or fertility. Using (i) a large panel of genetic markers and (ii) complete three or four generation pedigrees, respectively, we show that incidences of inbreeding in a long-lived primate population are rare, even after genetic isolation for 75 years. Moreover, our simulations suggest that kin in our population generally avoid breeding with each other. Finally, the few inbred individuals detected in our large sample did not suffer from lower survival. Given that many animal species face dramatic habitat loss combined with critical population declines, our study provides important implications for conservation biology in general and for population management in particular.