Article

Sequenced RAPD markers to detect hybridization in the barbary partridge (Alectoris barbara, Phasianidae).

Dipartimento di Biologia, Unità di Protistologia-Zoologia, Via A. Volta 4/6, I-56126 Pisa, Italia.
Molecular Ecology Resources (impact factor: 3.06). 01/2011; 11(1):180-4. DOI:10.1111/j.1755-0998.2010.02880.x pp.180-4
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT In the Alectoris partridges (Phasianidae), hybridization occurs occasionally as a result of the natural breakdown of isolating mechanisms but more frequently as a result of human activity. No genetic record of hybridization is known for the barbary partridge (A. barbara). This species is distributed mostly in North Africa and, in Europe, on the island of Sardinia (Italy) and on Gibraltar. The risk of hybridization between barbary and red-legged partridge (A. rufa: Iberian Peninsula, France, Italy) is high in Sardinia and in Spain. We developed two random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers to detect A. barbara × A. rufa hybrid partridges. We tested them on 125 experimental hybrids, sequenced the relative species-specific bands and found that the bands and their corresponding sequences were reliably transmitted through a number of generations (F1, F2, F3, BC1, BC2). Our markers represent a highly valuable tool for the preservation of the A. barbara genome from the pressing threat of A. rufa pollution.

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Keywords

125 experimental hybrids
 
A. barbara
 
A. barbara genome
 
A. barbara × A. rufa hybrid partridges
 
A. rufa
 
A. rufa pollution
 
Alectoris partridges
 
barbary partridge
 
corresponding sequences
 
France
 
genetic record
 
human activity
 
isolating mechanisms
 
markers
 
natural breakdown
 
random amplified polymorphic DNA
 
RAPD
 
relative species-specific bands
 
Sardinia
 
valuable tool
 

Filippo Barbanera