TY - JOUR
T1 - Rapid molecular assays for species and sex identification of swamp deer and other coexisting cervids in human-dominated landscapes of the Terai region and upper Gangetic plains, northern India
T2 - implications in understanding species distribution and population parameters
AU - Paul, Shrutarshi
AU - Ghosh, Tista
AU - Pandav, Bivash
AU - Mohan, Dhananjai
AU - Habib, Bilal
AU - Nigam, Parag
AU - Mondol, Samrat
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Indian Academy of Sciences.
PY - 2019/6/1
Y1 - 2019/6/1
N2 - Burgeoning pressures of habitat loss is a major cause of herbivore decline across India, forcing them to coexist with humans in non-protected areas. Their conservation in such landscapes is challenging due to paucity of ecological and demographic information. The northern subspecies of swamp deer, Rucervus duvaucelii duvaucelii, is one such herbivore that lives across human-dominated landscapes in Terai region and upper Gangetic plains of north India. Here, we describe species-specific molecular markers and a cervid-specific molecular sexing assay for swamp deer and four other coexisting cervids sambar, chital, barking deer and hog deer. Our markers show species-specific band patterns and a high success rate of 88.21% in large number of field collected reference samples for all species. Faecal pellets from pilot swamp deer survey samples from upper Ganges basin show 93.81% success rate, and only 5.5% misidentification based on morphological characteristics. Our cervid-specific molecular sexing multiplex assay accurately ascertained 81.15% samples to respective sexes. These molecular approaches provide an easy, quick and cheap option to generate critical information on herbivore population parameters and aid their conservation in this mosaic of protected and non-protected grassland habitats.
AB - Burgeoning pressures of habitat loss is a major cause of herbivore decline across India, forcing them to coexist with humans in non-protected areas. Their conservation in such landscapes is challenging due to paucity of ecological and demographic information. The northern subspecies of swamp deer, Rucervus duvaucelii duvaucelii, is one such herbivore that lives across human-dominated landscapes in Terai region and upper Gangetic plains of north India. Here, we describe species-specific molecular markers and a cervid-specific molecular sexing assay for swamp deer and four other coexisting cervids sambar, chital, barking deer and hog deer. Our markers show species-specific band patterns and a high success rate of 88.21% in large number of field collected reference samples for all species. Faecal pellets from pilot swamp deer survey samples from upper Ganges basin show 93.81% success rate, and only 5.5% misidentification based on morphological characteristics. Our cervid-specific molecular sexing multiplex assay accurately ascertained 81.15% samples to respective sexes. These molecular approaches provide an easy, quick and cheap option to generate critical information on herbivore population parameters and aid their conservation in this mosaic of protected and non-protected grassland habitats.
KW - herbivore distribution
KW - molecular sexing
KW - non-protected areas
KW - species-specific assays
KW - swamp deer
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85065655691
U2 - 10.1007/s12041-019-1094-1
DO - 10.1007/s12041-019-1094-1
M3 - Article
C2 - 31204725
AN - SCOPUS:85065655691
SN - 0022-1333
VL - 98
JO - Journal of Genetics
JF - Journal of Genetics
IS - 2
M1 - 44
ER -