AI Article Synopsis

  • - Many lemur species are hard to study due to their arboreal, elusive, and nocturnal nature, as well as their endangered status, making non-invasive sampling essential for conservation efforts.
  • - This study explores a promising molecular sexing test involving the coamplification of the SRY gene and the amelogenin X gene, which shows potential for universal application across various lemur species.
  • - The researchers validate this test by successfully applying it to degraded DNA from non-invasive samples, finding that discrepancies between field and molecular sex determinations are low and mostly due to field errors rather than mistakes in lab testing.

Article Abstract

Many lemur species are arboreal, elusive, and/or nocturnal and are consequently difficult to approach, observe and catch. In addition, most of them are endangered. For these reasons, non-invasive sampling is especially useful in primates including lemurs. A key issue in conservation and ecological studies is to identify the sex of the sampled individuals to investigate sex-biased dispersal, parentage, social organization and population sex ratio. Several molecular tests of sex are available in apes and monkeys, but only a handful of them work in the lemuriform clade. Among these tests, the coamplification of the SRY gene with the amelogenin X gene using strepsirhine-specific X primers seems particularly promising, but the reliability and validity of this sexing test have not been properly assessed yet. In this study, we (i) show that this molecular sexing test works on three additional lemur species (Microcebus tavaratra, Propithecus coronatus and P. verreauxi) from two previously untested genera and one previously untested family, suggesting that these markers are likely to be universal among lemurs and other strepsirrhines; (ii) provide the first evidence that this PCR-based sexing test works on degraded DNA obtained from noninvasive samples; (iii) validate the approach using a large number of known-sex individuals and a multiple-tubes approach, and show that mismatches between the field sex and the final molecular consensus sex occur in less than 10% of all the samples and that most of these mismatches were likely linked to incorrect sex determinations in the field rather than genotyping errors.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.22222DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

lemur species
12
sexing test
12
molecular sexing
8
test works
8
sex
6
noninvasive molecular
4
sexing
4
sexing evaluation
4
evaluation validation
4
validation sry-
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!