The health of Colorado's bighorn sheep population
remains1 as
precarious2 as the steep
alpine3 terrain4 the animals inhabit, but a new study led by researchers at the University of Colorado
Boulder5 has found that inbreeding--a common hypothesis for a recent decline--likely isn't to blame. Bighorn
herds7 tend to be small and
isolated8 in their mountain
ecosystems9, putting the animals at high risk for a
genetic11 "bottleneck," said Catherine Driscoll, a graduate student in the Department of Ecology and
Evolutionary12 Biology at CU-Boulder and lead author of the study. Previous research has shown that inbreeding can weaken a population's
immunity13 to disease across subsequent generations.
However, after using mitochondrial
DNA14 data to
analyze15 a diverse set of
hereditary16 markers, researchers found that all five native herds in Rocky Mountain National Park (RMNP) are maintaining healthy levels of genetic variation compared to other bighorn populations across the western United States.
The findings, which were recently published in the Journal of Wildlife Management, suggest that other factors such as
nutritional20 deficiencies, habitat fragmentation and competition from encroaching mountain goats may play a more significant role in depressing bighorn population growth.
The researchers used DNA testing to examine genetic diversity across five separate RMNP herds. In particular, the study zeroed in on the Mummy
herd6, which experienced a severe population crash in the mid-1990s and has been especially slow to recover.