What Do You Think About Inbreeding?

jollysue

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I saw this in another forum. I thought it was interesting so I copy and pasted it. It is to me and something I have thought about with my own fish. It seems to contradict the common wisdom.


Charles Q. Choi
Special to LiveScience
posted: 05 February 2007
01:51 pm ET




Inbreeding often conjures visions of mutant offspring, but scientists now find it can have its upside in the wild.


Animals in the wild often avoid close kin as mates, as inbreeding causes harmful genes that might otherwise recede into the background to manifest in progeny more often. While animal breeders often practice inbreeding to cultivate desirable traits, they must then cull unfit offspring.


However, recent theoretical predictions suggest that, at times, the benefits of inbreeding might outweigh the costs. Now evolutionary biologist Timo Thünken at the University of Bonn in Germany and his colleagues has discovered real-life evidence in support of these predictions.


The scientists investigated the African cichlid Pelvicachromis taeniatus [image], a small monogamous fish that lives in the rivers and creeks of Cameroon and Nigeria. Males occupy caves, while females compete with each other for males.


"We initially wanted to investigate whether P. taeniatus avoid kin as mating partners, because it has been shown in other species that inbred offspring have disadvantages—for example, increased mortality," Thünken said.


"First, we conducted a female choice experiment," he recalled. This involved aquariums with breeding caves for males and hiding places for rejected females.


"Against our expectations, females did not avoid brothers, but even preferred them," Thünken told LiveScience. This proved true in 17 of 23 experiments.


Both parents in the species care for their young to protect them against predators, the researchers noted. This requires high levels of cooperation.


Since kinship generally favors cooperation, Thünken and his colleagues theorized related parents did a better job of cooperating than non-kin. Their observations supported their ideas, finding that inbreeding pairs spent significantly more time accompanying their free-swimming young. They also discovered males of inbreeding pairs spent significantly more time guarding breeding caves and were half as likely to attack their mates.


The researchers curiously found that inbreeding did not appear to lead to higher rates of harmful gene expression. However, Thünken and his colleagues noted inbreeding might affect traits they have not yet studied, such as the fertility of offspring.


The scientists plan to look next at the level of inbreeding in natural populations of the fish, the fitness consequences of inbreeding and the mechanisms of kin recognition in the species.


Thünken and his colleagues reported their findings in the February 6 issue of the journal Current Biology.
 
I don't think anyone would doubt that there will be times when in breeding can give good results.

I would be interested to know more on their experimental set up. 17 out of 23 experiments would appear to indicate evidential support, but the n number is not huge there.

Inbreeding does also have problems. Shikano T, Chiyokubo T, Taniguchi N. (2000a). Effect of inbreeding on salinity tolerance in the guppy (Poecilia reticulata). Aquaculture demonstrated that salinity tolerance is strongly sensitive to inbreeding depression and shows a linear decrease with an increase in inbreeding coefficient.

The above details were taken from this Nature article
 
I am bumping this, andy until I can have time tonight to look at your article.

I do not do studies in biology or most natural sciences. So I am not really equiped to find the studies of the things you are familiar with. I am more liable to just pick up reports of the results of studies here and there w/o actually going out of my way to find them or the actual experiments and studies.

Haha That sentence is clear as mud. I will edit it later.
 

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