Credit: CC0 Public Domain

New hope for the preservation of red squirrels in Britain and Ireland is on the horizon, after the completion of the red and grey squirrel reference genomes by scientists at the Wellcome Sanger Institute and their collaborators. The genomes may hold clues to why grey squirrels are immune to squirrel pox, a disease that is fatal to most red squirrels.

The newly sequenced genomes are a valuable resource that opens up numerous research pathways, including helping conservationists to monitor squirrel population diversity and investigate evolutionary traits. Genomics will help to create a clearer biological picture of red and grey squirrels, providing highly accurate data on which to base conservation strategies.

Red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) are native to Britain and Ireland, but they are under serious threat of extinction in these countries because of habitat loss, competition with grey squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) and a fatal disease called squirrel pox. While the greys are immune to the disease, squirrel pox outbreaks can kill up to 80 percent of a red squirrel population in an affected area. Grey squirrels are native to North America and were first introduced to Britain by people in the late nineteenth century.

Pressure from grey squirrels and outbreaks of squirrel pox mean that red squirrels are now confined to isolated pockets in northern England and Wales, with a more connected population in Scotland and Ireland. Small, fragmented populations are at greater risk of declines and may suffer from genetic inbreeding.

Lancashire, Manchester and Merseyside Wildlife Trust and Kat Fingland, a Ph.D. researcher from Nottingham Trent University, provided red and grey squirrel specimens. Scientists at the Wellcome Sanger Institute extracted DNA and then used PacBio SMRT and Illumina sequencing technology to generate the first, high-quality red and grey squirrel reference genomes.

It is hoped that the genomes will help understand the genetic basis of immunity to squirrel pox in grey squirrels, as well as in the small percentage of reds that survive outbreaks. The genome can also be used to help ensure that populations are genetically mixed, helping to select animals for reintroduction based on their genetic compatibility with existing populations to give them the best chance of survival through successful breeding.

"Our red squirrels are in serious trouble and the red and grey squirrel genomes will be a valuable tool in our battle to save them. We need to find out whether isolated populations, such as the one in Formby, Lancashire, are at risk from inbreeding. We also need to find viable solutions to the threat of squirrel pox, and I hope the genome will allow researchers to do just that." said Rachel Cripps, red squirrel officer at Lancashire, Manchester and Merseyside Wildlife Trust.

"Over the past two decades conservation genetic management of red squirrels has been based on using traditional DNA profiling techniques, which don't allow us to understand much about the genetic variation we see between species or populations. The release of the red and grey squirrel genomes will allow us to base conservation strategies on much more data, and to answer questions about how populations differ and what implications this might have for their success," said Dr. Rob Ogden, head of conservation genetics at the University of Edinburgh.

Explore further Interbreeding turned grey squirrels black: study

More information: Daniel Mead et al. The genome sequence of the Eurasian red squirrel, Sciurus vulgaris Linnaeus 1758, Wellcome Open Research (2020). Daniel Mead et al. The genome sequence of the Eurasian red squirrel, Sciurus vulgaris Linnaeus 1758,(2020). DOI: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.15679.1 For more information on the 25 Genomes Project, visit www.sanger.ac.uk/science/colla … /25-genomes-25-years For more information on the Darwin Tree of Life Project, visit www.sanger.ac.uk/science/programmes/tree-of-life