Autosomal SNP-genotype data of brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Finland

Harmonising methodology between countries is crucial in transborder population monitoring. However, immediate application of alleged, established DNA-based methods across the extended area can entail drawbacks and may lead to biases. Therefore, genetic methods need to be tested across the whole area...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kopatz, Alexander, Norman, Anita J., Spong, Göran, Valtonen, Mia, Kojola, Ilpo, Aspi, Jouni, Kindberg, Jonas, Flagstad, Øystein, Kleven, Oddmund
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2024
Subjects:
SNP
DNA
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.t76hdr87v
Description
Summary:Harmonising methodology between countries is crucial in transborder population monitoring. However, immediate application of alleged, established DNA-based methods across the extended area can entail drawbacks and may lead to biases. Therefore, genetic methods need to be tested across the whole area before being deployed. Around 4,500 brown bears ( Ursus arctos ) live in Norway, Sweden, and Finland and they are divided into the western (Scandinavian) and eastern (Karelian) population. Both populations have recovered and are connected via asymmetric migration. DNA-based population monitoring in Norway and Sweden uses the same set of genetic markers. With Finland aiming to implement monitoring, we tested the available SNP-panel developed to assess brown bears in Norway and Sweden, on tissue samples from a representative set of 93 legally harvested individuals from Finland. The aim was to test for ascertainment bias and evaluate its suitability for DNA-based transnational-monitoring covering all three countries. We compared results to the performance of microsatellite genotypes of the same individuals in Finland and against SNP-genotypes from individuals sampled in Sweden ( N =95) and Norway ( N =27). In Finland, a higher resolution for individual identification was obtained for SNPs (PI=1.18E-27) compared to microsatellites (PI=4.2E-11). Compared to Norway and Sweden, probability of identity of the SNP-panel was slightly higher and expected heterozygosity lower in Finland indicating ascertainment bias. Yet, our evaluation show that the available SNP-panel outperforms the microsatellite panel currently applied in Norway and Sweden. The SNP-panel represents a powerful tool that could aid improving transnational DNA-based monitoring of brown bears across these three countries. Funding provided by: Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Crossref Funder Registry ID: https://ror.org/04aha0598 Award Number: 93 tissue samples collected 2011-2017 from legally harvested male brown bears in Finland were genotyped with ...