Endangered Species Research (Sep 2013)

Mucus: aiding elasmobranch conservation through non-invasive genetic sampling

  • L Lieber,
  • S Berrow,
  • E Johnston,
  • G Hall,
  • J Hall,
  • C Gubili,
  • DW Sims,
  • CS Jones,
  • LR Noble

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3354/esr00524
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 3
pp. 215 – 222

Abstract

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Large-scale genetic sampling by non-invasive methods is of vital importance for the conservation of vulnerable or elusive species. In the marine environment, non-invasive genetic sampling can provide a powerful alternative to conventional biopsies. We designed and implemented mucus swabbing for a free-ranging elasmobranch, thereby demonstrating the utility of this method in the field. We report the first attempt at mucus collection from 30 plankton-feeding basking sharks Cetorhinus maximus from 3 spatially distinct ‘hotspots’ in Irish waters. C. maximus DNA was successfully extracted and verified using DNA barcoding of the mitochondrial DNA cytochrome c oxidase 1 gene (99% sequence similarity) and basking shark species-specific multiplex PCRs derived from the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer 2 locus. Mitochondrial control region sequencing (1086 bp) showed that Irish samples were dominated by 2 haplotypes previously found to be globally distributed. Additionally, 1 novel haplotype was defined from western County Kerry. On-going genetic tagging will eventually provide more accurate estimates of global basking shark population structuring, abundance and behavioural ecology.