Weekend Herald

EVOLUTION REVOLUTION

Should we change species to save them?

- Emily Anthes

Understand­ing the benefits and risks is really complex. And this idea of meddling with nature is quite confrontin­g to people.

Line Bay, Australian Institute of Marine Science

We’re searching for solutions in an altered world. We need to take risks. We need to be bolder.

Dan Harley, Zoos Victoria.

For tens of millions of years, Australia has been a playground for evolution and it lays claim to some of the most remarkable creatures on Earth.

It is the birthplace of songbirds, the land of egg-laying mammals and the world capital of pouch-bearing marsupials.

Nearly half of the continent’s birds and roughly 90 per cent of its mammals, reptiles and frogs are found nowhere else on the planet.

Australia has also become a case study in what happens when people push biodiversi­ty to the brink. Habitat degradatio­n, invasive species, infectious diseases and climate change have put many native animals in jeopardy and given Australia one of the worst rates of species loss in the world.

In some cases, scientists say, the threats are so intractabl­e that the only way to protect Australia’s unique animals is to change them. Using a variety of techniques, including crossbreed­ing and gene editing, scientists are altering the genomes of vulnerable animals, hoping to arm them with the traits they need to survive.

“We’re looking at how we can assist evolution,” said Anthony Waddle, a conservati­on biologist at Macquarie University in Sydney.

It is an audacious concept, one that challenges a fundamenta­l conservati­on impulse to preserve wild creatures as they are. But in this human-dominated age — in which Australia is simply at the leading edge of a global biodiversi­ty crisis — the traditiona­l conservati­on playbook may no longer be enough, some scientists said.

“We’re searching for solutions in an altered world,” said Dan Harley, a senior ecologist at Zoos Victoria. “We need to take risks. We need to be bolder.”

The extinction vortex

The helmeted honeyeater is a bird that demands to be noticed, with a patch of electric-yellow feathers on its forehead and a habit of squawking loudly as it zips through the dense swamp forests of the state of Victoria. But over the last few centuries, humans and wildfires damaged or destroyed these forests, and by 1989, just 50 helmeted honeyeater­s remained, clinging to a tiny sliver of swamp at the Yellingbo Nature Conservati­on Reserve.

Intensive local conservati­on efforts, including a captive breeding programme at Healesvill­e Sanctuary, a Zoos Victoria park, helped the birds hang on. But there was very little genetic diversity among the remaining birds — a problem common in endangered animal population­s — and breeding inevitably meant inbreeding. “They have very few options for making good mating decisions,” said Paul Sunnucks, a wildlife geneticist at Monash University in Melbourne.

In any small, closed breeding pool, harmful genetic mutations can build up over time, damaging animals’ health and reproducti­ve success, and inbreeding exacerbate­s the problem. The helmeted honeyeater was an especially extreme case. The most inbred birds left one-tenth as many offspring as the least inbred ones, and the females had life spans that were half as long, Sunnucks and his colleagues found.

Without some kind of interventi­on, the helmeted honeyeater could be pulled into an “extinction vortex”, said Alexandra Pavlova, an evolutiona­ry ecologist at Monash. “It became clear that something new needs to be done.”

A decade ago, Pavlova, Sunnucks and several other experts suggested an interventi­on known as genetic rescue, proposing to add some Gippsland yellow-tufted honeyeater­s and their fresh DNA to the breeding pool.

The helmeted and Gippsland honeyeater­s are members of the same species, but they are geneticall­y distinct subspecies that have been evolving away from each another for roughly the last 56,000 years. The Gippsland birds live in drier, more open forests and are missing the pronounced feather crown that give helmeted honeyeater­s their name.

Genetic rescue was not a novel idea. In one widely cited success, scientists revived the tiny, inbred panther population of Florida by importing wild panthers from a separate population from Texas.

But the approach violates the traditiona­l conservati­on tenet that unique biological population­s are sacrosanct, to be kept separate and geneticall­y pure. “It really is a paradigm shift,” said Sarah Fitzpatric­k, an evolutiona­ry ecologist at Michigan State University who found that genetic rescue is underused in the United States.

Crossing the two types of honeyeater­s risked muddying what made each subspecies unique and creating hybrids that were not well suited for either niche. Moving animals between population­s can also spread disease, create new invasive population­s or destabilis­e ecosystems in unpredicta­ble ways.

Genetic rescue is also a form of active human meddling that violates what some scholars refer to as conservati­on’s

“ethos of restraint” and has sometimes been critiqued as a form of playing God.

“There was a lot of angst among government agencies around doing it,” said

Andrew Weeks, an ecological geneticist at the

University of

Melbourne who began a genetic rescue of the endangered mountain pygmy possum in 2010. “It was only really the idea that the population was about to go extinct that I guess gave government agencies the nudge.”

Sunnucks and his colleagues made the same calculatio­n, arguing that the risks associated with genetic rescue were small — before the birds’ habitats were carved up and degraded, the two subspecies did occasional­ly interbreed in the wild — and paled in comparison with the risks of doing nothing.

And so, since 2017, Gippsland birds have been part of the helmeted honeyeater breeding programme at Healesvill­e Sanctuary. In captivity there have been real benefits, with many mixed pairs producing more independen­t chicks per nest than pairs composed of two helmeted honeyeater­s. Dozens of hybrid honeyeater­s have now been released into the wild. They seem to be faring well, but it is too soon to say whether they have a fitness advantage.

Monash and Zoos Victoria experts are also working on the genetic rescue of other species, including the critically endangered Leadbeater’s possum, a tiny, treedwelli­ng marsupial known as the forest fairy. The lowland population of the possum shares the Yellingbo swamps with the helmeted honeyeater; in

2023, just 34 lowland possums remained. The first genetic rescue joey was born at

Healesvill­e

Sanctuary last month.

The scientists hope that boosting genetic diversity will make these population­s more resilient in the face of whatever unknown dangers might arise, increasing the odds that some individual­s possess the traits needed to survive. “Genetic diversity is your blueprint for how you contend with the future,” Harley of Zoos Victoria said.

Targeting threats

For the northern quoll, a small marsupial predator, the existentia­l threat arrived nearly a century ago, when the invasive, poisonous cane toad landed in eastern Australia. Since then, the toxic toads have marched steadily westward — and wiped out entire population­s of quolls, which eat the alien amphibians.

But some of the surviving quoll population­s in eastern Australia seem to have evolved a distaste for toads. When scientists crossed toad-averse quolls with toad-naive quolls, the hybrid offspring also turned up their tiny pink noses at the toxic amphibians.

What if scientists moved some toad-avoidant quolls to the west, allowing them to spread their discrimina­ting genes before the cane toads arrived? “You’re essentiall­y using natural selection and evolution to achieve your goals, which means that the problem gets solved quite thoroughly and permanentl­y,” said Ben Phillips, a population biologist at Curtin University in Perth who led the research.

A field test, however, demonstrat­ed how unpredicta­ble nature can be. In 2017, Phillips and his colleagues released a mixed population of northern quolls on a tiny, toad-infested island. Some quolls did interbreed, and there was preliminar­y evidence of natural selection for “toad-smart” genes.

But the population was not yet fully adapted to toads, and some quolls ate the amphibians and died, Phillips said. A large wildfire also broke out on the island. Then, a cyclone hit.

“All of these things conspired to send our experiment­al population extinct,” Phillips said. The scientists did not have enough funding to try again, but “all the science lined up”, he said.

Advancing science could make future efforts even more targeted. In 2015, for instance, scientists created more heat-resistant coral by crossbreed­ing colonies from different latitudes. In a proof-of-concept study from 2020, researcher­s used the gene-editing tool known as CRISPR to directly alter a gene involved in heat tolerance.

CRISPR will not be a practical, real-world solution anytime soon, said Line Bay, a biologist at the Australian Institute of Marine Science who was an author of both studies. “Understand­ing the benefits and risks is really complex,” she said. “And this idea of meddling with nature is quite confrontin­g to people.”

But there is growing interest in the biotechnol­ogical approach. Waddle hopes to use the tools of synthetic biology, including CRISPR, to engineer frogs that are resistant to the chytrid fungus, which causes a fatal disease that has already contribute­d to the extinction of at least 90 amphibian species.

The fungus is so difficult to eradicate that some vulnerable species can no longer live in the wild. “So either they live in glass boxes forever,” Waddle said, “or we come up with solutions where we can get them back in nature and thriving.”

Unintended consequenc­es

Still, no matter how sophistica­ted the technology becomes, organisms and ecosystems will remain complex. Genetic interventi­ons are “likely to have some unintended impacts”, said Tiffany Kosch, a conservati­on geneticist at the University of Melbourne who is also hoping to create chytrid-resistant frogs. A genetic variant that helps frogs survive chytrid might make them more susceptibl­e to another health problem, she said. There are plenty of cautionary tales, efforts to re-engineer nature that have backfired spectacula­rly. The toxic cane toads were set loose in Australia deliberate­ly, in what would turn out to be a deeply misguided attempt to control pest beetles.

But some environmen­tal groups and experts are uneasy about genetic approaches for other reasons, too. “Focusing on intensive interventi­on in specific species can be a distractio­n,” said Cam Walker, a spokespers­on for Friends of the Earth Australia. Staving off the extinction crisis will require broader, landscape-level solutions such as halting habitat loss, he said.

Moreover, animals are autonomous beings, and any interventi­on into their lives or genomes must have “a very strong ethical and moral justificat­ion” — a bar that even many traditiona­l conservati­on projects do not clear, said Adam Cardilini, an environmen­tal scientist at Deakin University in Victoria.

Chris Lean, a philosophe­r of biology at Macquarie University, said he believed in the fundamenta­l conservati­on goal of “preserving the world as it is for its heritage value, for its ability to tell the story of life on Earth”. Still, he said he supported the cautious, limited use of new genomic tools, which may require us to reconsider some long-standing environmen­tal values.

In some ways, assisted evolution is an argument — or, perhaps, an acknowledg­ement — that there is no stepping back, no future in which humans do not profoundly shape the lives and fates of wild creatures.

To Harley, it has become clear that preventing more extinction­s will require human interventi­on, innovation and effort. “Let’s lean into that, not be daunted by it,” he said. “My view is that 50 years from now, biologists and wildlife managers will look back at us and say, ‘Why didn’t they take the steps and the opportunit­ies when they had the chance?’”

 ?? Illustrati­on / Lauren Peters-Collaer, The New York Times ?? When traditiona­l conservati­on fails, science is using “assisted evolution” to give vulnerable wildlife a chance.
Illustrati­on / Lauren Peters-Collaer, The New York Times When traditiona­l conservati­on fails, science is using “assisted evolution” to give vulnerable wildlife a chance.
 ?? Photos / Chang W. Lee, The New York Times ?? By 1989, just 50 helmeted honeyeater­s were left in the wild. With little genetic diversity remaining among the birds, and breeding often meaning inbreeding, experts launched an interventi­on known as genetic rescue; biologists Paul Sunnucks, Alexandra Pavlova and Nick Bradsworth look for helmeted honeyeater­s in McMahons Creek, Australia.
Photos / Chang W. Lee, The New York Times By 1989, just 50 helmeted honeyeater­s were left in the wild. With little genetic diversity remaining among the birds, and breeding often meaning inbreeding, experts launched an interventi­on known as genetic rescue; biologists Paul Sunnucks, Alexandra Pavlova and Nick Bradsworth look for helmeted honeyeater­s in McMahons Creek, Australia.
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