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Faecal DNA to the rescue: Shotgun sequencing of non-invasive samples reveals two subspecies of Southeast Asian primates to be Critically Endangered species

View ORCID ProfileAndie Ang, Dewi Imelda Roesma, View ORCID ProfileVincent Nijman, View ORCID ProfileRudolf Meier, View ORCID ProfileAmrita Srivathsan, Rizaldi
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/867986
Andie Ang
1Raffles’ Banded Langur Working Group, Wildlife Reserves Singapore Conservation Fund, Singapore 729826
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Dewi Imelda Roesma
2Department of Biology, Andalas University, Padang, West Sumatra 25163, Indonesia
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Vincent Nijman
3Department of Social Sciences, Oxford Brookes University, OX3 0BP, United Kingdom
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Rudolf Meier
4Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117543
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Amrita Srivathsan
4Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117543
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  • For correspondence: rizaldi@sci.unand.ac.id asrivathsan@gmail.com
Rizaldi
2Department of Biology, Andalas University, Padang, West Sumatra 25163, Indonesia
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  • For correspondence: rizaldi@sci.unand.ac.id asrivathsan@gmail.com
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Abstract

A significant number of Southeast Asian mammal species described in the 19th and 20th century were subsequently synonymized and are now considered subspecies. Many are affected by rapid habitat loss and there is thus an urgent need to re-assess the conservation status based on species boundaries established with molecular data. However, such data are lacking for many populations and subspecies. We document via a literature survey and empirical study how shotgun sequencing of faecal DNA is a still underutilized but powerful tool for accelerating such evaluations. We obtain 11 mitochondrial genomes for three subspecies in the langur genus Presbytis through shotgun sequencing of faecal DNA (P. femoralis femoralis, P. f. percura, P. siamensis cf. cana). The genomes support the resurrection of all three subspecies to species based on multiple species delimitation algorithms (PTP, ABGD, Objective Clustering) applied to a dataset covering 40 species and 43 subspecies of Asian colobines. For two of the newly recognized species (P. femoralis, P. percura), the results lead to an immediate change in the IUCN status to Critically Endangered due to small population estimates and fragmented habitat. We conclude that faecal DNA should be more widely used for clarifying species boundaries in endangered mammals.

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  • ↵# Co-first

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Posted December 08, 2019.
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Faecal DNA to the rescue: Shotgun sequencing of non-invasive samples reveals two subspecies of Southeast Asian primates to be Critically Endangered species
Andie Ang, Dewi Imelda Roesma, Vincent Nijman, Rudolf Meier, Amrita Srivathsan, Rizaldi
bioRxiv 867986; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/867986
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Faecal DNA to the rescue: Shotgun sequencing of non-invasive samples reveals two subspecies of Southeast Asian primates to be Critically Endangered species
Andie Ang, Dewi Imelda Roesma, Vincent Nijman, Rudolf Meier, Amrita Srivathsan, Rizaldi
bioRxiv 867986; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/867986

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