Bridging the Gap: Using DNA from museum specimens to unlock the secrets of the Bass Strait Island Fauna
Did you know that there are over 50 islands in the Bass Strait, the 240 km stretch of ocean that separates mainland Australia and Tasmania? But what of its fauna? Scientists have recently extracted DNA from museum specimens to better understand the evolutionary history of Bass Strait island fauna.
The Bass Strait islands represent the remnants of a land bridge that over millennia has periodically been exposed, allowing the movement of species between mainland Australia and Tasmania. Understanding how wildlife populations on these islands are related to those on mainland Australia and Tasmania provides important insights into the evolutionary history of species and helps us better understand how sea level changes across this region influenced species movement.
Unfortunately, many wildlife populations on these islands are now rare or even extinct, as the larger Bass Strait islands were settled as early as the the 18th century, when Europeans arrived to exploit local seal colonies. As a result, many of the islands have undergone significant clearing of native habitats and seen the introduction of predators and domestic animals. Species including the southern elephant seal (Mirounga leonina), bare-nosed wombat (Vombatus ursinus), spotted-tailed quoll (Dasyurus maculatus) and King Island Emu (Dromaius novaehollandiae minor) have now disappeared from some or all of these islands.
The Long-nosed potoroo (Potorous tridactylus) is another species that has suffered declines on the Bass Strait islands. In 2012, a genetic study determined that populations of Long-nosed potoroos on each side of Bass Strait belonged to different sub-species: Potorous tridactylus trisucatus on the Victorian side and Potorous tridactylus apicalis in Tasmania. Unfortunately, no high-quality tissue samples from Bass Strait island potoroos were available at the time to determine which sub-species these populations belonged to. In fact, the last time a potoroo was trapped by a researcher on a Bass Strait island was in the 1970s, long before routine collection of tissue for DNA based studies and before the establishment any tissue collection in an Australian museum.
In this study we extracted DNA from dried skins of King and Flinders island potoroos from the Australian Museum and Museum Victoria collections to try to answer the sub-species question. These skins were between 45 and 85 years old and interestingly two of the skins from the Australian Museum collection were the individuals used to describe a separate King island sub-species of Long-nosed potoroo, Potorous tridactylus benormi in 1963. This sub-species has not been formally recognised since its description; however this study is the first to investigate its validity using genetics.
Potorous tridactylus benomi holotype (lateral view). Image credit: Sally Cowan.
Potorous tridactylus benomi holotype (superior view). Image credit: Sally Cowan.
Our results showed that the King and Flinders island potoroos both belong to the Tasmanian sub-species Potorous tridactylus apicalis. This result supported the notion that the earlier land connection between Tasmania and the Islands allowed for expansion northward of Tasmanian potoroos, and likely other species, much earlier than mainland populations could move south. Geographically, King and Flinders island are also closer to Tasmania (~80 and ~54 km) than to the mainland (~88 and ~140 km).
Knowing that these island Long-nosed potoroos populations are indeed true Tasmanians provides vital information for conservation management of the species across Bass Strait and can guide any future conservation efforts. If future surveys confirm surviving populations of potoroos on these islands, translocations or reintroductions using other Tasmanian sourced potoroos may be considered to ensure their survival. Our study also demonstrated the wealth of information that can be generated from museum collections that include now rare or extinct populations and species.
Dr Greta Frankham, Australian Centre for Wildlife Genomics, Australian Museum Research Institute
Dr Mark Eldridge, Terrestrial Vertebrates, Australian Museum Research Institute
Dr Linda Neaves, The Fenner School of Environment and Society, The Australian National University
More information:
- Frankham G.J, Neaves L.E & Eldridge M.D.B. (2020) Genetic relationships of Long-nosed Potoroos Potorous tridactylus (Kerr, 1792) from the Bass Strait Islands, with notes on the subspecies Potorous tridactylus benormi Courtney, 1963. Records of the Australian Museum. https://doi.org/10.3853/j.2201-4349.72.2020.1725
- Frankham G.J, Handasyde K.A & Eldridge M.D.B (2012) Novel insights into the phylogenetic relationships of the endangered marsupial genus Potorous. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2012.05.013