How to translate text using browser tools
23 March 2017 Characterisation of microsatellites for Litoria nannotis (Amphibia : Hylidae), an endangered waterfall frog endemic to the Australian Wet Tropics
Robert Puschendorf, Erica V. Todd, Michael G. Gardner
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Litoria nannotis is an endangered waterfall frog from the wet tropics region in north Queensland that has suffered significant population declines due to the emerging fungal disease known as chytridiomycosis. The species has two deeply divergent lineages, and we used 454 shotgun sequencing of DNA extracted from one individual of the northern lineage to identify and design PCR primers for 576 microsatellite loci. Thirty markers were tested for amplification success and variability in a population sample from each lineage. Of these, 17 were found to be polymorphic in the northern lineage and 10 loci were polymorphic in the southern lineage. Numbers of alleles per locus ranged from 2 to 14 (mean = 6.47, s.d. = 4.02) for the northern lineage (17 polymorphic loci), and from 2 to 8 (mean = 5.40, s.d. = 2.55) in the southern lineage (10 polymorphic loci). Levels of heterozygosity were high in both lineages (northern mean HE = 0.63, s.d. = 0.21, range = 0.27–0.89; southern mean HE = 0.57, s.d. = 0.25, range = 0.18–0.81). These loci will be useful in understanding the genetic variation and connectivity amongst populations of this species recovering from mass population declines due to disease.

© CSIRO 2016
Robert Puschendorf, Erica V. Todd, and Michael G. Gardner "Characterisation of microsatellites for Litoria nannotis (Amphibia : Hylidae), an endangered waterfall frog endemic to the Australian Wet Tropics," Australian Journal of Zoology 64(6), 390-394, (23 March 2017). https://doi.org/10.1071/ZO16072
Received: 18 October 2016; Accepted: 1 March 2017; Published: 23 March 2017
KEYWORDS
454 GSFLX
population declines
shotgun sequencing
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top