The Guardian (USA)

Large dams may threaten survival of platypus population­s, research finds

- Lisa Cox

Major dams have disrupted gene flow between platypus population­s, making them more vulnerable to threats, according to new research.

Scientists from the University of New South Wales examined the genetic makeup of platypuses in free-flowing and dammed rivers in that state.

Their results, published in Communicat­ions Biology, found there was greater genetic differenti­ation between platypus population­s located above and below dams compared to population­s in free-flowing rivers.

They said this indicated large dams were major barriers to the movement of platypuses, resulting in limited or no gene flow between separate population­s.

Prof Richard Kingsford, the director of the UNSW Centre for Ecosystem Science and one of the paper’s authors, said the findings had significan­t implicatio­ns for platypus conservati­on.

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“This is the first time that we’ve got some really good evidence of what we suspected might be going on,” he said.

The scientists took blood samples from platypus population­s above and below five dams in New South Wales: Dartmouth, Eucumbene, Jindabyne,

Pindari and Nepean.

They also took samples from population­s in adjacent free-flowing rivers without dams.

The researcher­s extracted DNA from the samples and found large difference­s between the genetic compositio­n of population­s living above dams and those living below. This level of genetic differenti­ation was not found in the neighbouri­ng rivers without dams.

“By using thousands of molecular markers, we were able to identify a strong signal indicating that genetic differenti­ation increased rapidly between platypuses below and above these large dams,” said the paper’s lead author, Luis Mijangos, a former UNSW PhD student who is now at the University of Canberra.

The difference­s were found to be greater the longer the dam had been present.

Kingsford said the results suggested dams prevented platypuses from moving up and down rivers and

meeting up with other platypuses. This meant a population below a dam eventually started to change geneticall­y from the group above because they were unable to mix their genes.

He said over the long term this could lead to inbreeding and reduced genetic variabilit­y, resulting in population­s that were less adaptable and more vulnerable to threats.

The inability to disperse also meant platypuses could not move to areas with more suitable conditions. “In the long term, it can contribute to the local extinction of a population, usually below the dam,” Kingsford said.

Platypuses are declining in many parts of their range in eastern Australia.

Dr Gilad Bino, another of the paper’s authors, said the research showed dams were one of the main threats to the species.

The authors said water conservati­on and management planning should consider alternativ­e approaches to large dams.

Kingsford said some population­s might also require human interventi­ons in future, such as translocat­ion from one part of a river to another, to improve their genetic variabilit­y.

Dr Melody Serena, a conservati­on biologist at the Australian Platypus Conservanc­y, said platypuses were capable of circumvent­ing waterfalls more than 30m high and man-made weirs at least 10m high.

She said the UNSW research suggested a different rule might apply when a platypus encountere­d a very large weir (more than 70m high).

“However, the good news is that the study also confirmed that inbreeding has not yet actually increased due to restricted movement – platypus population­s on both sides of study weirs remain geneticall­y diverse,” she said.

 ?? Photograph: AAP/North Central Catchment Management Authority ?? Researcher­s have found DNA from platypus population­s above and below major dams is greatly differenti­ated, suggesting dams are preventing genetic mixing.
Photograph: AAP/North Central Catchment Management Authority Researcher­s have found DNA from platypus population­s above and below major dams is greatly differenti­ated, suggesting dams are preventing genetic mixing.

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