Volume 2, Issue 1 p. 51-57

Identification of domestic cattle hybrids in wild cattle and bison species: a general approach using mtDNA markers and the parametric bootstrap

Todd J. Ward

Todd J. Ward

Department of Veterinary Pathobiology

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Joseph P. Bielawski

Joseph P. Bielawski

Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences

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Scott K. Davis

Scott K. Davis

Department of Animal Science, Texas A & M University, College Station, TX 77843, USA

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Joe W. Templeton

Joe W. Templeton

Department of Veterinary Pathobiology

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James N. Derr

Corresponding Author

James N. Derr

Department of Veterinary Pathobiology

All correspondence to: James N. Derr. Tel: (409)862-4775; Fax: (409)845-9972; E-mail: [email protected].Search for more papers by this author
First published: 28 February 2006
Citations: 65

Abstract

Many species are currently undergoing reductions in population size due to widespread habitat loss and expanding human activities. Because interspecific hybridization is often a consequence of population decline and fragmentation, identification of individuals or populations with hybrid ancestry is an increasingly important issue in conservation biology. In many wild cattle and bison species, the problem of natural hybridization has been compounded by indiscriminate crossbreeding with domestic cattle for the purpose of improving domesticated stocks. Therefore, a genetic test using the polymerase chain reaction was developed so that wild cattle and bison with domestic cattle mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotypes could be rapidly identified. Using this genetic test, domestic cattle mtDNA haplotypes were detected in Bos grunniens (yak), Bison bonasus (European bison), and 6 out of the 15 (40%) Bison bison (North American bison) populations tested. In total, 30 out of the 572 (5.2%) North American bison tested, were found to have domestic cattle mtDNA. The hybrid origin of these mtDNA haplotypes was verified in a phylogenetic analysis using the parametric bootstrap. These results are discussed in terms of their implications for the conservation status and future management of wild cattle and bison species.