Genome study offers hope for diminutive endangered porpoise
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[May 06, 2022] By
Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The most
comprehensive genetic assessment to date of the vaquita, the world's
rarest marine mammal, is offering a glimmer of hope that this small
tropical porpoise native to Mexico's Gulf of California may avoid
extinction despite its population dwindling to about 10.
Researchers said on Thursday genome data from 20 vaquitas showed that
while the species possesses low genetic diversity - differences in the
DNA among the various individuals - the number of potentially harmful
mutations that could endanger its survival through inbreeding was quite
low.
The vaquita, first described by scientists in 1958 and now deemed
critically endangered, is the smallest cetacean, the group including
whales, dolphins and porpoises, reaching about 5 feet (1.5 meters) long
and 120 pounds (54 kg). Its torpedo-shaped body is gray on the top and
white on the underside with a dark ring around the eyes.
Computational simulations performed by the researchers to predict
extinction risk showed that vaquitas, whose population has fallen more
than 99% since the outset of the 20th century due to human activities,
have a high chance of rebounding if fishing gillnets are completely
eliminated from their habitat. Gillnets, large curtains of netting that
hang in the water, are used to catch fish and shrimp but have killed
many vaquitas that get entangled and drown.
"Our key findings are that the vaquita is not doomed to extinction by
genetics, as some have begun to assume," said UCLA ecology and
evolutionary biology doctoral student Christopher Kyriazis, co-lead
author of the study published in the journal Science. "These findings
are important because they provide hope for a species that is at the
brink of extinction, one that many are now giving up on."
A particular threat is gillnet poaching of an endangered fish called the
totoaba. Totoaba swim bladders, purported to be a fertility enhancer,
are prized in China.
"Dried totoaba swim bladders are traded on the black market in China for
traditional medicinal purposes, and fetch a higher price than cocaine,"
said study co-author Phillip Morin, a research geneticist at the U.S.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Southwest Fisheries
Science Center.
Vaquitas, still actively reproducing despite their small numbers,
inhabit the northern Gulf of California, also called the Sea of Cortez,
between mainland Mexico and the Baja peninsula.
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A mother and calf vaquita, a critically endangered small tropical
porpoise native to Mexico?s Gulf of California, surface in the
waters off San Felipe, Mexico in this handout picture taken in 2008.
Paula Olson/NOAA Fisheries/Handout via REUTERS
"Gillnet fishing in the vaquita's habitat has been banned, but the
ban has not been enforced and vaquitas continue to perish in nets,"
said study co-lead author Jacqueline Robinson, a postdoctoral
researcher at the University of California, San Francisco's
Institute for Human Genetics.
The first population estimate, conducted in 1997,
found there were approximately 570 vaquitas. The population has
since declined by up to about 50% annually.
The researchers gauged the genetic health of the species, which
diverged evolutionarily from its closest relatives about 2.5 million
years ago, by examining samples from 20 individuals obtained between
1985 and 2017, mostly archived from vaquitas that had died. One
worry with such a small population is that inevitable mating among
closely related individuals could increase deleterious mutations
harmful to species survival.
The genome data indicated that the vaquita population already was
relatively small - about 5,000 individuals - for hundreds of
thousands of years before the crash caused by human activities,
making low genetic diversity a natural feature of the species.
It also showed there has been relatively little inbreeding among
vaquitas and very few harmful recessive mutations that may lead to
congenital deformities when inbreeding that could imperil species
survival - lower that 11 other cetacean species assessed, including
the blue whale.
One cetacean species already appears to have been driven to
extinction by humans in recent decades: the baiji, or Chinese river
dolphin.
"Because of its shy nature, there is very little known about the
vaquita," Robinson said. "The species is in danger of going extinct
before we will even fully know what we are losing, and there is no
replacing it once it's gone."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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