Hello MARMAM community,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am excited to share our new open access
publication in Ecology and Evolution, available at this link:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ece3.10562.

Hernandez, K. M., O'Neill, K. B., Bors, E. K., Steele, D, Zoller, J. A.,
Constantine, R., Horvath, S., Baker, C. S. (2023) Using epigenetic clocks
to investigate changes in the age structure of critically endangered Māui
dolphins. Ecology and Evolution, 13(10), e10562.

The age of an individual is an essential demographic parameter but is
difficult to estimate without long-term monitoring or invasive sampling.
Epigenetic approaches are increasingly used to age organisms, including
nonmodel organisms such as cetaceans. Māui dolphins (*Cephalorhynchus
hectori maui*) are a critically endangered subspecies endemic to Aotearoa
New Zealand, and the age structure of this population is important for
informing conservation. Here we present an epigenetic clock for aging Māui
and Hector's dolphins (*C. h. hectori*) developed from methylation data
using DNA from tooth aged individuals (*n *= 48). Based on this training
data set, the optimal model required only eight methylation sites, provided
an age correlation of .95, and had a median absolute age error of 1.54
years. A leave-one-out cross-validation analysis with the same parameters
resulted in an age correlation of .87 and median absolute age error of 2.09
years. To improve age estimation, we included previously published beluga
whale (*Delphinapterus leucas*) data to develop a joint beluga/dolphin
clock, resulting in a clock with comparable performance and improved
estimation of older individuals. Application of the models to DNA from skin
biopsy samples of living Māui dolphins revealed a shift from a median age
of 8-9 years to a younger population aged 7-8 years 10 years later. These
models could be applied to other dolphin species and demonstrate the
ability to construct a clock even when the number of known age samples is
limited, removing this impediment to estimating demographic parameters
vital to the conservation of critically endangered species.


-- 
Keith M. Hernandez, PhD | he/him/his
Postdoctoral Scholar, Cetacean Conservation and Genomics Laboratory
Marine Mammal Institute, Hatfield Marine Science Center, Oregon State
University
Newport, OR 97365
Google Scholar
<https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&view_op=list_works&authuser=2&gmla=AJsN-F7AcUvo_PFCRJscFGu2XuH3EkWrpU3pumcw1CbSJJ1N96Ji897ykEHERHQKD6tJNrmxYO8hqnyTe7gcBR8Pj8skLnkiiA&user=GSs303EAAAAJ>
|
ResearchGate <https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Keith_Hernandez2>
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