Amphibia-Reptilia 32 (2011): 428-434
Multiple paternity in the Black Caiman (Melanosuchus niger)
population in the Anavilhanas National Park, Brazilian Amazonia
Fabio L. Muniz1 , Ronis Da Silveira2 , Zilca Campos3 , William E. Magnusson4 ,
Tomas Hrbek1,5 , Izeni P. Farias1,*
Abstract. The formation of dominance hierarchies in which the female mates with a large dominant male is common among
crocodilians. However, there is the possibility of polyandry, in which females mate with multiple partners during a single
breeding season and generate offspring with multiple paternity. In the present study, eight pairs of heterologous primers
developed for Alligator mississippiensis and Caiman latirostris were used to determine whether multiple paternity exists in
the Black Caiman, Melanosuchus niger. For such, we analyzed 34 Black Caiman offspring from the Anavilhanas Archipelago
in the Negro River (state of Amazonas, Brazil). The specimens came from six groups, each containing five or six hatchlings.
Paternity exclusion and genetic identity indices were calculated to test the robustness of the microsatellite loci. Simple allele
counts and maximum likelihood estimation of family clusters were used to determine the likelihood of occurrence of multiple
paternity. Among the eight loci tested, five were effective at determining paternity, with paternity exclusion values close to
1.0 (QC = 0.92) and genetic identity values close to zero (IC < 0.01). Using the simple allele count, six cases of multiple
paternity were detected and confirmed in three hatchling groups by four different microsatellite loci. However, maximum
likelihood analysis indicated multiple paternity in all the groups analyzed, with five family clusters identified in one hatchling
group alone. Considering that this species is listed according to IUCN as Lower Risk/Conservation Dependent, our results
have direct conservation implications. Multiple paternity increases effective population size by maintaining genetic variation,
and thus could be an important mechanism to maintain genetic diversity in isolated local populations.
Keywords: Alligatoridae, Melanosuchus niger, microsatellites, paternity.
The Black Caiman (Melanosuchus niger) is the
largest alligatorid species and figures among
the largest carnivores of the continental Americas (Ross, 1998). Its historical and actual distributions encompass parts of Bolivia, Brazil,
Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Guyana and French
Guyana (Ross, 1998). As in all living crocodil-
1 - Laboratório de Evolução e Genética Animal, Departamento de Biologia, Universidade Federal do Amazonas,
Av. Rodrigo Otávio Jordão Ramos 3000, 69077-070
Manaus-AM, Brazil
2 - Laboratório de Zoologia Aplicada à Conservação, Departamento de Biologia, Universidade Federal do Amazonas, Av. Rodrigo Otávio Jordão Ramos 3000, 69077070 Manaus-AM, Brazil
3 - Embrapa Pantanal, Caixa Postal 109, 79320-900
Corumbá-MS, Brazil
4 - Coordenação de Pesquisas em Ecologia, Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia, Caixa Postal 478,
69011-970 Manaus-AM, Brazil
5 - Biology Department, University of Puerto Rico, Rio
Piedras, San Juan, PR 00931, Puerto Rico
* Corresponding author; email:
izeni_farias@ufam.edu.br
© Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2011.
ian species, M. niger males grow to larger sizes
than females and there are historic records of
individuals of six meters total length – TL (Medem, 1983). The species is common in the
Brazilian Amazonia, but most of the larger individuals are around four meters in TL (Medem,
1983), and probably are survivors from the intensive hunting for their skins that in the 1970s
reduced many populations throughout the Amazonian biome (Plotkin et al., 1983; Rebêlo and
Magnusson, 1983; Da Silveira and Thorbjarnarson, 1999).
Male territoriality and dominance-mating behavior is typical of all crocodilians (Pough et
al., 2003) and is expected for M. niger, in which
the largest females reach up to 2.8 m TL, or
only about half the maximum TL of males
(Da Silveira, 2002). Territorial control by larger
crocodilians could reflect competition for food,
high quality nesting sites and potential partners.
Access to these resources could directly affect
DOI:10.1163/017353711X587741
Short Notes
both sexes and limit access to potential mating
partners (Pough et al., 2003).
In general, we would expect that male crocodilians would try to secure matings with as
many females as possible, which in turn should
prefer to mate with large dominant males, but
long term studies indicate that mating behavior in crocodilians is not so simple (Garrick and
Lang, 1977). Some females mate only with a
single male during many consecutive breeding
seasons but others can mate with up to three
males during the same breeding season, as was
recently demonstrated for Alligator mississippiensis (Lance et al., 2009).
Extra-pair paternity (polyandry) could be advantageous to the female because it increases
the genetic variance of her offspring, and provides opportunity for sperm competition which
in turn could result in the selection of the best
spermatozoids and therefore result in increase
in the health and fitness of the offspring (Parker,
1990; Madsen et al., 1992).
High-resolution genetic markers, such as microsatellites, are used to obtain detailed information on mating systems (Litt and Luty,
1989). Microsatellites are tandem repeat sequences in the genomes of eukaryotes (Goldstein and Schlötterer, 1999), generally in noncoding regions, and are the most polymorphic
class of molecular markers available to date.
These markers are widely employed in conservation programs, and in analysis of mating
systems of natural populations (Jones and Ardren, 2003). In kinship analyses, microsatellites
have advantages over other markers in that they
have Mendelian inheritance, are co-dominant,
and exhibit a high degree of genetic diversity
(Hedrick and Parker, 1998). Often microsatellite markers developed for one species can be
used in closely related species.
Although microsatellite makers have not
been developed specifically for M. niger, a
study by de Thoisy et al. (2006) characterized seven populations of M. niger widespread
throughout the Amazon Basin using markers
originally developed for Caiman latirostris (Zu-
429
coloto et al., 2002) and A. mississippiensis
(Glenn et al., 1998; Davis et al., 2002). Of the
original seven Caiman latirostris and 28 A. mississippiensis markers, eight markers were successfully amplified and were polymorphic in M.
niger, thereby allowing their use as heterologous primers. These eight primers were used in
the present study to obtain data on the occurrence of multiple paternity.
Multiple paternity appears to be a frequently
encountered pattern in reptiles including lizards
(e.g., Laloi et al., 2004; Fitze et al., 2005; Eizaguirre et al., 2007), snakes (e.g., McCracken
et al., 1999; Garner and Larsen, 2005; Voris,
2008), turtles and tortoises (e.g., FitzSimmons,
1998; Valenzuela, 2000; Johnston et al., 2006;
Pearse et al., 2006; Fantin et al., 2008) and
crocodilians such as Alligator mississippiensis
(Davis et al., 2001), Caiman latirostris (Verdade et al., 2002; Amavet et al., 2008), Caiman
crocodilus crocodilus (Oliveira, 2010), Caiman
crocodilus yacare (Godshalk, 2002), Crocodylus moreletii (McVay et al., 2008) and Alligator sinensis (Hu and Wu, 2010). A molecular
analysis of the mating system of Melanosuchus
niger has yet to be studied, however. Our aim
in the present study was to genetically analyze
the mating pattern of M. niger in an archipelago
of the Negro River located in the Anavilhanas
National Park, Central Amazonia, using the
eight heterologous microsatellite loci used by de
Thoisy et al. (2006).
Muscle-tissue samples from caudal scales were obtained
during a long term caiman mark-recapture program undertaken in the Anavilhanas Archipelago located in the lower
Negro River, state of Amazonas, Brazil (Da Silveira et al.,
1997). The Anavilhanas Archipelago encompass 100 000
ha, it is the second largest freshwater Archipelago in the
world with more than 100 islands, and represents almost
30% of the total area of the Anavilhanas National Park,
which lies between 02◦ 00′ and 03◦ 02′ S, and 60◦ 27′ and
61◦ 07′ W.
Seventeen sub adults of M. niger were sampled to test the
robustness of the genetic markers and 34 hatchlings from
six groups were sampled for the paternity test. The Anavilhanas Archipelago is in a black water system that supports a
small population of M. niger characterized by naturally very
low abundance (<10/km of shoreline during dry season).
Most of the non-hatchling caiman surveyed in the Anavilhanas Archipelago were the spectacled caiman (Caiman
430
crocodilus) and only 3.5% were M. niger (Da Silveira et al.,
1997). Nests of M. niger in Anavilhanas are very rare and
only one nest of this species was found during a decade-long
study in the area. Annually 1000 km of shoreline in 1992,
1995, 1996, 1997 and 1998 were surveyed, and during each
survey no more than nine groups of hatchlings were found
(Da Silveira, 2002). During the surveys, hatchlings from six
different groups, presumably representing six different nests
were sampled. Samples from five to seven hatchlings per
group were collected. Crocodilian hatchlings can move between hatchling groups. However, this is very unlikely in
the case of M. niger in the Anavilhanas, where there are few
nesting females, and hatchling groups were generally kilometers from each other.
All samples were stored in tubes containing 95% alcohol.
DNA isolation was performed according to the proteinase
K/phenol-chloroform protocol (Sambrook et al., 1989). The
genomic DNA was used as template for the PCR-based amplification of microsatellite regions using the heterologous
primers used for the characterization of M. niger populations by de Thoisy et al. (2006). PCR conditions were based
on protocols reported by Zucoloto et al. (2002) for Caiman
latirostris and Glenn et al. (1998) and Davis et al. (2002) for
A. mississippiensis. In all PCR amplifications, we included a
second round of 15 cycles with an annealing temperature at
53◦ C used for the incorporation of a 6-FAM labeled M13
(-21) primer (Schuelke, 2000). In the PCR reactions, we
used the primers Claµ 6 and Claµ 8, developed for Caiman
latirostris Zucoloto et al. (2002), and the primers Amiµ 8,
Amiµ11, Amiµ13, Amiµ 14, Amiµ 16 and Amiµ 20 developed for A. mississippiensis (Glenn et al., 1998). All forward primers had an M13 (-21) tail added to their 5′ end.
The PCR product was combined with a ROX size standard
(DeWoody et al., 2004), and resolved on the automatic sequencer ABI 3130xl (Applied Biosystems). Fragments were
binned, and sizes were estimated in the software GeneMapper (Applied Biosystems).
To estimate the efficiency of the markers in
detecting multiple paternity, the probability of
genetic identity for each locus (I ) was calculated, and a combined probability of genetic
identity – IC (Paetkau et al., 1995), and the
probability of paternity exclusion for each locus
(Q), estimated by the joint probability of paternity exclusion method – QC (Weir, 1996).
We used two methods to estimate multiple
paternity. First, we used a simple method of
counting the number of observed alleles, and
comparing it to the expected number of alleles in each nest (Myers and Zamudio, 2004).
The maximum number of expected alleles in
each nest under the assumption of monogamy is
four, unless one observes homozygous progeny
(FitzSimmons, 1998; Valenzuela, 2000). Each
Short Notes
homozygous genotype indicates that alleles are
shared between parents, and therefore the number of expected alleles decreases to three with
one homozygous genotype, and to two with
two homozygous genotypes. The allelic count
method is conservative and accurate (Myers and
Zamudio, 2004). Second, we carried out analyses using the program Colony v 2.0 (Wang,
2004). Colony uses Bayesian Inference to estimate the number of full sib family clusters in
each nest (Jones and Wang, 2009). Inference of
full sib families is possible even with no a priori
knowledge of parental genotypes, as this program uses information of allelic sharing at multiple loci (multi-locus genotypes) among individuals in each nest.
Of the eight microsatellites used, three (Claµ
8, Amiµ 13 and Amiµ 14) had an unclear pattern and were therefore removed from analyses. Additionally, locus Amiµ 8 in nest 4 was
not used since only three of the six individuals
in this nest could be genotyped, indicating the
presence of a null allele in this group.
Of the five microsatellite loci analyzed, the
locus Claµ 6 was the most polymorphic with
seven alleles, and the locus Amiµ 11 had the
smallest number of alleles (table 1). The five
microsatellite loci had a high power to discriminate paternity when analyzed together since
the probability of joint paternity exclusion (QC)
was very close to one, and the joint probability
of genetic identity (IC) was close to zero (table 1).
Table 1. Number of different alleles detected for each locus
for each microsatellite. Q = index of paternity exclusion for
each locus; QC = combined index of paternity exclusion;
I = probability of genetic identity; and IC = combined
index of probability of genetic identity.
Locus
Claµ 6
Amiµ 8
Amiµ 11
Amiµ 16
Amiµ 20
All
Alleles
Paternity
exclusion (Q)
Genetic
identity (I )
7
6
2
6
5
0.62
0.10
0.19
0.53
0.40
<0.01
0.30
0.40
0.11
0.19
QC = 0.92
IC < 0.01
431
Short Notes
Table 2. Simple allelic counting method: Columns Claµ 6 to Amiµ 20 shows the maximum expected number of alleles/actual
number of alleles observed; * = indicates a case of multiple paternity. Colony: inferred number of full sib families, and
associated likelihoods. Smaller or larger number of full sib families than the reported number in each nest is associated with
smaller likelihood for the specific nest.
Nest
N1
N2
N3
N4
N5
N6
N◦ of hatchlings
6
5
5
6
5
7
Simple allelic counting method
Colony
Claµ 6
Amiµ 8
Amiµ 11
Amiµ 16
Amiµ 20
N◦ of full sib families
Log likelihood
3/3
4/3
3/2
2/2
3/2
4/5*
3/4*
3/2
2/3*
X
2/2
3/3
3/2
3/2
3/2
3/2
4/2
3/2
4/3
3/3
3/2
3/2
3/2
2/4*
4/5*
3/3
3/2
3/2
4/3
3/5*
3
2
4
4
2
6
−3.997574
−2.427482
−1.819115
−1.373169
−1.660341
−5.653093
For all analyses of multiple paternity using
the simple allelic count method, we tested all the
clutches for deviation from Hardy-Weinberg to
avoid the underestimating the number of null alleles. None of the clutches showed a significant
deviation from Hardy-Weinberg after Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons (Rice,
1989).
Using simple counting of alleles methods, we
detected six cases of multiple paternity (table 2).
The maximum number of offspring alleles assuming a monogamous mating system where
both parents are heterozygous and do not share
any alleles is four offspring alleles. When parents share one or more alleles, observed as the
presence of homozygous offspring, the number
of expected alleles in the offspring is reduced
to three (when only one homozygous offspring
type is observed) and two (when two homozygote offspring types are observed). For example, in N1, the microsatellite marker Amiµ 20
had five alleles, and since no homozygote offspring was observed, the maximum expected
number of offspring alleles was four. Therefore,
the presence of a fifth allele necessitates the
contribution of an additional parent to the offspring clutch. Similarly, in N6 the marker Amiµ
16 had four alleles, however, two types of homozygotes were observed in this nest, resulting
in the maximum expectation of two offspring alleles. The presence of four alleles in this situation also indicates a case of multiple paternity.
Results of maximum-likelihood analysis of
full sib families performed in the program
Colony using five microsatellite loci indicated
multiple paternity in all six groups analyzed. In
each group, at least two full sib family clusters
were inferred (table 2). In group 6, there was
an indication of the contribution of more than
two males since six full sib families were inferred.
We can affirm that five of the eight tested
primers were variable and had sufficient discriminatory power to infer multiple paternity in
all six groups of M. niger from the Anavilhanas
Archipelago. The discovery of polyandrous behavior in M. niger has important implications
with regard to conservation strategies for the
species, as the understanding of mating systems
is important for the maintenance of viable populations.
Polyandry offers genetic benefits by improving the chances that females will have access
to “good genes”, and pass on these genetic
benefits to their offspring (Yasui, 1998). A female could also increase her fitness and that of
her offspring by copulating with higher quality males, but if the female could determine the
quality of the male a priori, she should avoid
polyandry. Given low densities of M. niger in
the Anavilhanas, the observed 100% incidence
of polyandry speaks against the choosy-females
hypothesis but rather in favor of a bet-hedging
mechanism to maximize the chance of producing at least some high-quality offspring.
Incidences of multiple paternity increase
effective population sizes with respect to census
sizes, and such a population harbors increased
432
genetic variability and evolutionary potential
(Chesser and Baker, 1996). The presence of
multiple paternity in M. niger may, therefore,
be important in maintaining genetic variability of this species. Observed heterozygosity
in natural populations from Anavilhanas and
Janauacá Lake were 0.70 and 0.67, respectively
(de Thoisy et al., 2006). These values are high
compared to heterozygosity in other crocodiles
(Rodriguez et al., 2008; Hekkala et al., 2010;
Milián-García et al., 2011). Therefore, multiple
paternity can counter the effects of male territoriality and dominance, as male dominance and
territoriality reduce effective population sizes
and, consequently, genetic variability of the
species. High levels of genetic variability increase a species’ or population’s evolutionary
potential and adaptability to environmental variations. Knowledge of the mating system of an
organism is, therefore, important for developing
management and conservation strategies, especially when isolated populations are comprised
of small numbers of individuals, because multiple paternity has direct consequences for effective population sizes and evolutionary potential
(Sugg and Chesser, 1994; Chesser and Baker,
1996).
McVay et al. (2008) posed the following
question: “Is polyandrous behavior a common
ancestral strategy among crocodilians or did it
arise independently in different taxa?” In order to answer this question, studies involving
the paternity test are needed for many other
crocodilian species that have yet to be investigated, but the present study contributes to answering this question. This study is an unequivocal demonstration of multiple paternity in M.
niger. However, because of the, albeit remote,
possibility of movement of some hatchlings
among groups, further analyses are needed, with
a greater number of nests from different locations, to determine the precise frequency of
multiple paternity among and between nests in
this species.
Short Notes
Acknowledgements. Fieldwork was supported by Fundação o Boticário de Proteção à Natureza to WM and laboratory analyses by CNPq 575603/2008-9 to IPF. WM and
IPF were supported by a Bolsa de Pesquisa scholarship
from CNPq during the study. The Instituto Brasileiro do
Meio Ambiente e dos Recursos Naturais (IBAMA) gave
access to their floating and ground bases in Anavilhanas.
This study formed a portion of FLM’s CNPq-PIBIC Program at UFAM. Currently, FLM is a Masters student at the
Genética, Conservação e Biologia Evolutiva graduate program of INPA/UFAM. FLM is supported by a fellowship
from FAPEAM.
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Received: February 16, 2011. Accepted: July 6, 2011.