Kia ora MARMAM community,

My colleagues and I are very happy to share the publication of our new paper:

‘An epigenetic DNA methylation clock for age estimates in Indo-Pacific 
bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus)’ in Evolutionary Applications.

Citation: Peters, K. J.,  Gerber, L.,  Scheu, L.,  Cicciarella, R.,  Zoller, J. 
A.,  Fei, Z.,  Horvath, S.,  Allen, S. J.,  King, S. L., Connor, R. C.,  
Rollins, L. A., &  Krützen, M. (2022).  An epigenetic DNA methylation clock for 
age estimates in Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus). 
Evolutionary Applications,  00,  1– 8.

Abstract: Knowledge of an animal's chronological age is crucial for 
understanding and predicting population demographics, survival and 
reproduction, but accurate age determination for many wild animals remains 
challenging. Previous methods to estimate age require invasive procedures, such 
as tooth extraction to analyse growth layers, which are difficult to carry out 
with large, mobile animals such as cetaceans. However, recent advances in 
epigenetic methods have opened new avenues for precise age determination. These 
‘epigenetic clocks’ present a less invasive alternative and can provide age 
estimates with unprecedented accuracy. Here, we present a species-specific 
epigenetic clock based on skin tissue samples for a population of Indo-Pacific 
bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) in Shark Bay, Western Australia. We 
measured methylation levels at 37,492 cytosine-guanine sites (CpG sites) in 165 
samples using the mammalian methylation array. Chronological age estimates with 
an accuracy of ±1 year were available for 68 animals as part of a long-term 
behavioral study of this population. Using these samples with known age, we 
built an elastic net model with Leave-One-Out-Cross-Validation, which retained 
43 CpG sites, providing an r = 0.86 and median absolute age error (MAE) = 2.1 
years (5% of maximum age). This model was more accurate for our data than the 
previously published methylation clock based on skin samples of common 
bottlenose dolphins (T. truncatus: r = 0.83, MAE = 2.2) and the multi-species 
odontocete methylation clock (r = 0.68, MAE = 6.8), highlighting that 
species-specific clocks can have superior performance over those of 
multi-species assemblages. We further developed an epigenetic sex estimator, 
predicting sex with 100% accuracy. As age and sex are critical parameters for 
the study of animal populations, this clock and sex estimator will provide a 
useful tool for extracting life history information from skin samples rather 
than long-term observational data for free-ranging Indo-Pacific bottlenose 
dolphins worldwide.

Available open-access at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/eva.13516

Please also note the blog accompanying the paper at whalescientists.com: 
https://whalescientists.com/dolphin-age-dna-methylation/


Ngā mihi,
Katharina


Katharina J. Peters, PhD
Postdoctoral Researcher
Te Kura Aronukurangi | School of Earth and Environment
Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha | University of Canterbury
Ōtautahi, Aotearoa | Christchurch, NZ
https://katharinajpeters.weebly.com
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to