“…Over the past 10 years, the field of conservation genomics has largely focused on transitioning from a handful of microsatellite markers to thousands of genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (Allendorf, Hohenlohe, & Luikart, 2010;Mable, 2019). Whether characterized using reduced-representation data or whole-genome sequence (WGS) methods, SNP-based estimates of genome-wide variation are being used to better inform conservation by delineating species, including cryptic species (e.g., Binks, Steane, & Byrne, 2021;Quattrini et al, 2019;but see Stanton et al, 2019), detecting hybridization and introgression (Dufresnes & Dubey, 2020;Peters et al, 2016; but see Forsdick et al, 2021;Hauser, Athrey, & Leberg, 2021 preprint), identifying conservation units (Liddell et al, 2020), informing conservation translocations (Dresser, Ogle, & Fitzpatrick, 2017;Glassock, Grueber, Belov, & Hogg, 2021), guiding conservation breeding programs (e.g., Galla et al, 2020;Wright et al, 2020) and identifying the genomic basis of adaptive traits (Duntsch et al, 2020). However, SNPs constitute only one component of genome-wide variation (Ho, Urban, & Mills, 2020).…”