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Determining causes of genetic isolation in a large carnivore (Ursus americanus) population to direct contemporary conservation measures

机译:确定大型食肉动物(美洲熊)的遗传隔离原因以指导当代保护措施

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摘要

The processes leading to genetic isolation influence a population’s local extinction risk, and should thus be identified before conservation actions are implemented. Natural or human-induced circumstances can result in historical or contemporary barriers to gene flow and/or demographic bottlenecks. Distinguishing between these hypotheses can be achieved by comparing genetic diversity and differentiation in isolated vs. continuous neighboring populations. In Ontario, American black bears (Ursus americanus) are continuously distributed, genetically diverse, and exhibit an isolation-by-distance structuring pattern, except on the Bruce Peninsula (BP). To identify the processes that led to the genetic isolation of BP black bears, we modelled various levels of historical and contemporary migration and population size reductions using forward simulations. We compared simulation results with empirical genetic indices from Ontario black bear populations under different levels of geographic isolation, and conducted additional simulations to determine if translocations could help achieve genetic restoration. From a genetic standpoint, conservation concerns for BP black bears are warranted because our results show that: i) a recent demographic bottleneck associated with recently reduced migration best explains the low genetic diversity on the BP; and ii) under sustained isolation, BP black bears could lose between 70% and 80% of their rare alleles within 100 years. Although restoring migration corridors would be the most effective method to enhance long-term genetic diversity and prevent inbreeding, it is unrealistic to expect connectivity to be re-established. Current levels of genetic diversity could be maintained by successfully translocating 10 bears onto the peninsula every 5 years. Such regular translocations may be more practical than landscape restoration, because areas connecting the peninsula to nearby mainland black bear populations have been irreversibly modified by humans, and form strong barriers to movement.
机译:导致遗传隔离的过程会影响人口的局部灭绝风险,因此应在实施保护措施之前加以确定。自然或人为因素可能会导致历史或现代障碍,阻碍基因流动和/或人口统计瓶颈。可以通过比较孤立的和连续的邻近人群的遗传多样性和分化来区分这些假设。在安大略省,除布鲁斯半岛(BP)以外,美洲黑熊(Ursus americanus)持续分布,遗传多样,并表现出按距离隔离的结构模式。为了确定导致BP黑熊遗传隔离的过程,我们使用正向模拟对历史和当代移民和人口规模减少的各个水平进行了建模。我们将模拟结果与不同地理隔离水平下安大略黑熊种群的经验遗传指数进行了比较,并进行了额外的模拟以确定易位是否可以帮助实现遗传恢复。从遗传学的角度,对BP黑熊的保护值得关注,因为我们的结果表明:i)最近与迁徙减少有关的人口瓶颈最能解释BP的遗传多样性低; ii)在持续隔离下,BP黑熊可能会在100年内损失其稀有等位基因的70%至80%。尽管恢复迁徙通道将是增强长期遗传多样性和防止近交的最有效方法,但期望重新建立连通性是不现实的。每5年将10只熊成功转移到半岛上,可以维持目前的遗传多样性水平。这样的定期移位可能比景观恢复更实用,因为连接半岛与附近大陆黑熊种群的区域已经被人类不可逆转地改造,并形成了强大的移动障碍。

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