Wetton , J.H. and Parkin , D.T. , 1994 . Genetic variation in birds of prey. Department of the Environment, Bristol, UK. 50pp. Genetic Variation in Birds of Prey, Phase IV Final Report
]. There were a number of high-profile successful prosecutions as a result, with this case, and another large-scale peregrine laundering investigation, leading to custodial sentences. In 1994 the number of peregrine and goshawk offspring declared as captive-bred under the BRS fell by approximately 20%. This was suspected to be due to the deterrent impact of DNA profiling and the increased likelihood of detection and prosecution [16Fleming L.V. Douse A.F. Williams N.P. Captive breeding of peregrine and other falcons in Great Britain and implications for conservation of wild populations., 41The success of DNA profiling in wildlife law enforcement.]. Indeed, by 1996 SLP DNA profiling on samples from 69 registered goshawks and peregrines collected during announced inspections confirmed that all the offspring were bred from the claimed parent birds [16Fleming L.V. Douse A.F. Williams N.P. Captive breeding of peregrine and other falcons in Great Britain and implications for conservation of wild populations., 57The application of DNA technology to enforce raptor conservation legislation within Great Britain.]. Whilst the impact of SLP testing on theft from nests was significant, it was recognized that a more cost-effective method would be needed if a registration scheme were to be accompanied by routine DNA profiling.An STR multiplexing system, mirroring that developed for human forensics, would be cheaper, faster, more sensitive, and straightforward for databasing. Initial attempts to apply such systems were limited by the STRs cloned and sequenced at the time [11Dawnay N. Ogden R. Wetton J.H. Thorpe R.S. McEwing R. Genetic data from 28 STR loci for forensic individual identification and parentage analyses in 6 bird of prey species., 34Nesje M. Røed K.H. Lifjeld J.T. Lindberg P. Steen O.F. Genetic relationships in the peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) analysed by microsatellite DNA markers.] which were predominantly dinucleotide repeats rather than the tetranucleotide repeat units favoured in human forensics and now also championed for non-human DNA forensic investigations ([25Johnson R.N. Wilson-Wilde L. Linacre A. Current and future directions of DNA in wildlife forensic science., 30Linacre A. Gusmao L. Hecht W. Hellmann A.P. Mayr W.R. Parson W. Prinz M. Schneider P.M. Morling N. ISFG: recommendations regarding the use of non-human (animal) DNA in forensic genetic investigations., 47van Hoppe M.J. Dy M.A. van den Einden M. Iyengar A. SkydancerPlex: A novel STR multiplex validated for forensic use in the hen harrier (Circus cyaneus).], Ciavagli & Linacre 2018) as well as molecular ecology (e.g. [[9]Caballero I.C. Bates J.M. Hennen M. Ashley M.V. Sex in the city: breeding behavior of urban peregrine falcons in the midwestern US.]). Tetra-, and indeed penta- and hexanucleotide repeats show the ideal combination of characteristics - many alleles and high heterozygosity (resulting in high discrimination power), reasonably short total allele length (typically [1]Andreassen R. Schregel J. Kopatz A. Tobiassen C. Knappskog P.M. Hagen S.B. Kleven O. Schneider M. Kojola I. Aspi J. Rykov A. A forensic DNA profiling system for Northern European brown bears (Ursus arctos).]. In recent years, the need to select STRs from cloned libraries of fragmented DNA has diminished as they can now be identified directly by data-mining of genomic sequences that are becoming available. Screening genomes returns many more STRs than are required to provide robust forensic statistics and so a subset of loci which will amplify under similar conditions can be chosen and assayed together in a single multiplex. Constraints on multiplex size imposed by the limited number of fluorescent labels that could be used in CE to differentiate between loci with overlapping size ranges, are significantly eased by adopting the MPS approach.Inadvertent selection of linked loci will also become rarer as improved sequencing approaches enables the many genome sequences that still comprise hundreds or thousands of short scaffolds to be linked into chromosome level assemblies [[38]Peona V. Weissensteiner M.H. Suh A. How Complete Are" Complete" Genome assemblies?-An Avian Perspective.]. STRs widely separated on the same chromosome may not necessarily be a concern as even quite small family groups can reveal evidence of frequent recombination between physically linked loci but examination of many, or larger, pedigrees is still desirable to determine whether closer associations might adversely affect forensic interpretation. Alternative, albeit less direct means of evaluating independence of markers used for wildlife crime investigations, such as determining population level associations via measures of LD have been proposed [[52]Statistics for wildlife forensic DNA.], though this requires adequate numbers of unrelated individuals all from the same and relevant population which may still be challenging to obtain. Defining the relevant population depends upon the case circumstances, and ideally both the captive and wild populations should be extensively sampled in order to establish the degree of differentiation. The 1990s UK captive peregrine population had been largely established from UK wild stock, including birds taken under licence from the wild (permitted until 1988), ongoing legal integration of wild disabled birds and a significant number of laundered wild birds. Further diversity came from smaller numbers of imported birds and limited hybridization with other falcon species [[16]Fleming L.V. Douse A.F. Williams N.P. Captive breeding of peregrine and other falcons in Great Britain and implications for conservation of wild populations.]. The use of individuals sampled during casework in this study provided a representative panel of unrelated individuals comprising birds drawn both from the wild populations being illegally exploited (largely Scottish in this instance) and the captive population into which they are being laundered.For some forensic applications, such as testing the legitimacy of claimed parent/offspring relationships, even close linkage will not risk false prosecution as the absence of shared alleles across several loci is all that is needed to refute a false claim and this can only arise through multiple mutation events (with associated low probabilities), the inheritance of null alleles at several loci or misassignment of parentage. Questions of common origin are more seriously impacted due to the increased likelihood of sharing a suite of linked alleles. In this study the linked STR loci are all separated by at least 10.5 Mb, greater than the 6.3 Mb between vWA and D12S391, two loci in the standard European human DNA profiling multiplex, which are usually treated as unlinked except in cases (e.g. incest) where discrimination between very close kin is required [[37]O’Connor K.L. Tillmar A.O. Effect of linkage between vWA and D12S391 in kinship analysis.]. While greater physical distance is likely to increase the likelihood of recombination the rate varies throughout the genome. For the two human loci the recombination fraction in multigeneration pedigrees was estimated as 0.108 [[8]Budowle B. Ge J. Chakraborty R. Eisenberg A.J. Green R. Mulero J. Lagace R. Hennessy L. Population genetic analyses of the NGM STR loci.]: from our very limited data we see a similar recombination fraction of 0.083 or more between all but one pair of loci and so in combination with the absence of detectable LD among unrelated birds an assumption of independence is reasonable if the likelihood of close relationship is low. As seen within the legitimate sibling group in this case physical linkage can result in anomalously high or low estimates of the coefficient of relatedness but this will diminish with each generation as recombination breaks up linkage groups. To account for the potential persistence of association between alleles among birds who are believed to be unrelated, the use of extremely conservative measures of the probability of identity based on the probability of siblings sharing identical profiles has been proposed [[50]Waits L.P. Luikart G. Taberlet P. Estimating the probability of identity among genotypes in natural populations: cautions and guidelines.]. In this case our marker sets still yield combined probabilities of non-exclusion of sib identity (NE-SI) ofThe STR markers described here offer similar discrimination power to the minisatellite loci that were used in the 1990s but with greater ease of analysis and reduced sample requirements (~30 ng, fragment length 100-500 bp). Although CE analysis of the multiplexes required several independent amplifications to split loci with similar size distributions into distinguishable sets, the MPS approach, for which they were ultimately intended, allows them to be combined in a single amplification and demultiplexed bioinformatically into individual loci whilst keeping amplicon lengths as short as possible. Furthermore, we have demonstrated here that additional discrimination amongst predominantly UK-derived peregrines can be gained using MPS, either by using loci with compound repeat structures and/or including polymorphism information in the flanking DNA. The MPS approach is likely to be most suited to complex persecution casework where limited amounts of degraded and/or mixed DNA may have to be analysed to link a suspect or item to a shot, trapped or poisoned bird. This has increasingly been the focus of UK raptor investigations (RSPB 2019).
The nature of raptor crime within the UK has also changed in other ways over the intervening period following a shift towards the production of hybrid falcons by artificial insemination that accelerated dramatically from the mid-1990s as the take from the wild in the UK declined. Prior to 1994, hybrid falcons had made up a negligible proportion of UK captive breeding claims but by 2003 they represented more than 70% of submissions, leading to growing concern about their escape and potential genetic introgression into the wild population [[16]Fleming L.V. Douse A.F. Williams N.P. Captive breeding of peregrine and other falcons in Great Britain and implications for conservation of wild populations.]. This has led to an additional requirement of distinguishing between pure and hybrid birds. The STRs described in this study were chosen with this in mind and were tested across a range of falcon species to ensure that they were polymorphic in all. Initial data suggest that whilst the allele size ranges overlap between species the additional information in the repeat structures and flanking polymorphisms detectable by MPS may prove useful in determining a bird’s origins. Furthermore, these markers, and the parallel set developed for accipiters using similar approaches and selection criteria [[3]Beasley J. Wetton J.H. May C.A. Bird of prey CE and MPS multiplexes: high discrimination for forensic and conservation applications.], could be applied globally in the study of wild populations to explore interaction between subpopulations and sympatric species, and recovery following population bottlenecks [17Groombridge J.J. Dawson D.A. Burke T. Prys-Jones R. Brooke M.D.L. Shah N. Evaluating the demographic history of the Seychelles kestrel (Falco araea): genetic evidence for recovery from a population bottleneck following minimal conservation management., 24Johnson J.A. Talbot S.L. Sage G.K. Burnham K.K. Brown J.W. Maechtle T.L. Seegar W.S. Yates M.A. Anderson B. Mindell D.P. The use of genetics for the management of a recovering population: temporal assessment of migratory peregrine falcons in North America., 45Talbot S.L. Palmer A.G. Sage G.K. Sonsthagen S.A. Swem T. Brimm D.J. White C.M. Lack of genetic polymorphism among peregrine falcons Falco peregrinus of Fiji., 58Phylogeny of Falconidae and phylogeography of Peregrine Falcons., 7Brown J.W. Van Coeverden de Groot P.J. Birt T.P. Seutin G. Boag P.T. Friesen V.L. Appraisal of the consequences of the DDT‐induced bottleneck on the level and geographic distribution of neutral genetic variation in Canadian peregrine falcons, Falco peregrinus.].The application of SLP profiling to tackle the illegal laundering of birds of prey during the 1990s is widely regarded as one of the most successful examples of the use of a forensic technique to investigate UK wildlife crime. It also led to new legislation being introduced to facilitate the collection of samples to undertake identity or ancestry checks. The success of DNA profiling was dependent on three key aspects of the BRS; birds were individually and uniquely identifiable by numbered leg-rings or microchips, the physical location of individual birds was known, and information on all the declared familial relationships was available. Unfortunately, in 2008 (2009 in Scotland and Wales) the government reduced registration controls on peregrines kept in captivity in Great Britain. This effectively made it substantially more difficult for the statutory agencies to locate birds suspected of being taken from the wild once they had been sold or moved on by the breeder. Without this audit trail the value of DNA profiling in enforcement has been severely hampered. Concerningly, the last two decades have seen a significant rise in the sport of falcon racing in the Middle East which has again created an increased demand for peregrines and other falcons. Unsurprisingly, this has led to a substantial increase in UK prices, with female peregrines fetching £5,000 or more.
Around 2008, about 350 peregrines were declared captive bred each year, about the same number as the 1990s. Some ten years on this had more than doubled, and hundreds of these birds were being exported outside the EU. In the UK, eggs and chicks continue to be taken from some wild peregrine nests, so there seems little doubt that an unknown percentage of birds declared as captive bred are in reality illegally taken from the wild. Consequently, there is a need for DNA testing on captive breeding claims of those suspected of illegally dealing in wild taken birds, in conjunction with an annual program of random checks, akin to the work undertaken in 1996. This work needs to be focussed on the period shortly after birds are hatched and before they are sold or moved on. This approach would provide a strong deterrent for those illegally dealing in falcons and allow some assessment of the scale of the problem. Having validated, highly discriminating and cost-effective DNA profiling methods to assess the legitimacy of captive breeding claims will be a vital component of any such work and the STR markers reported for the first time here will provide the basis of such tests.
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