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[Animals] Inbreeding may be causing orca po[CENSORED]tion in the Pacific Northwest to crash


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Inbreeding among an endangered po[CENSORED]tion of orcas off the coasts of British Columbia, Washington and Oregon is a cause for concern.

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Southern Resident killer whales, a small po[CENSORED]tion of orcas living in the Pacific Ocean off the northwest coast of North America, are so isolated that they've taken to inbreeding, which has contributed to their decline, a new study finds.

While scientists have long suspected that inbreeding has been occurring within the group, it wasn't until researchers conducted genomic sequencing that they saw how dire the situation had become. 

The international team of researchers found that the orca group they studied — which included 100 living and dead orcas (Orcinus orca), of which 73 are still alive — had "lower levels of genetic diversity" and "higher levels of inbreeding" when compared with other North Pacific po[CENSORED]tions, according to a study published March 20 in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution(opens in new tab). 

 

One reason for this decline is the group's limited geographic range, which stretches between British Columbia and Oregon.

"They're a little more genetically isolated from other po[CENSORED]tions," study co-author Michael Ford(opens in new tab), a research scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle, told Live Science. "There's also less episodic interbreeding between [them and] other po[CENSORED]tions."

Studying the genetic makeup of the po[CENSORED]tion "filled a major gap" in researchers' understanding of why this po[CENSORED]tion of orcas "is failing to thrive," according to a NOAA statement(opens in new tab).

Related: Orca appears to adopt (or abduct) a baby pilot whale

"The sequencing revealed that several of the whales were the result of inbreeding between a parent and one of its children," Ford said. "Another 20% were bred between first cousins."

He added, "inbreeding is definitively a problem for this po[CENSORED]tion."

In general, killer whales begin reproducing when they're 10 years old, hitting their reproductive prime in their early 20s. However, the Southern Resident orcas had "less than half the chance of surviving through their prime years to reach 40, compared to the least inbred individuals," according to the statement. 

Additionally, females with the lowest level of inbreeding can expect to have 2.6 offspring in their lifetimes, while highly inbred females will have an average of 1.6 calves, according to the statement.

However, the researchers cautioned that inbreeding is likely not the only factor leading to the po[CENSORED]tion decline. Human impacts such as boat traffic and pollution have also taken a toll on the animals, according to the statement.

"Some of their core habitat is in an urban environment with a lot of small boat and large ship traffic that may directly disturb them or impact their ability to effectively hunt for salmon," Ford said. "They're also known to be fairly contaminated with both legacy and more recent contaminants."

Those include polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), which were banned in the United States in 1979, and para-phenylenediamine (PPDs), a chemical often found in flame retardants, Ford said. However, the researchers have found that other orca po[CENSORED]tions aren't affected nearly as much by these chemicals.

"There are transient po[CENSORED]tions of killer whales that have even higher levels of contaminants than the Southern Residents, and they seem to be doing OK," Ford said. "[These human-related factors] are likely to be impacting the po[CENSORED]tion and I think we have good reason to believe that they are potential problems, but actually proving that like we did for inbreeding is difficult."

link: https://www.livescience.com/inbreeding-may-be-causing-orca-po[CENSORED]tion-in-the-pacific-northwest-to-crash

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