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首页> 外文期刊>Conservation Genetics >Uncloaking a cryptic, threatened rail with molecular markers: origins, connectivity and demography of a recently-discovered population
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Uncloaking a cryptic, threatened rail with molecular markers: origins, connectivity and demography of a recently-discovered population

机译:用分子标记物揭开隐秘的,受威胁的轨道:最近发现的种群的起源,连通性和人口统计学

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The threatened California Black Rail lives under dense marsh vegetation, is rarely observed, flies weakly and has a highly disjunct distribution. The largest population of rails is found in 8–10 large wetlands in San Francisco Bay (SF Bay), but a population was recently discovered in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains (Foothills), within a wetland network comprised of over 200 small marshes. Using microsatellite and mitochondrial analyses, our objectives were to determine the origins, connectivity and demography of this recently-discovered population. Analyses of individuals from the Foothills (n = 31), SF Bay (n = 31), the Imperial Valley (n = 6) and the East Coast (n = 3), combined with rigorous power evaluations, provided valuable insights into past history and current dynamics of the species in Northern California that challenge conventional wisdom about the species. The Foothills and SF Bay populations have diverged strongly from the Imperial Valley population, even more strongly than from individuals of the East Coast subspecies. The data also suggest a historical presence of the species in the Foothills. The SF Bay and Foothills populations had similar estimated effective population size over the areas sampled and appeared linked by a strongly asymmetrical migration pattern, with a greater probability of movement from the Foothills to SF Bay than vice versa. Random mating was inferred in the Foothills, but local substructure among marshes and inbreeding were detected in SF Bay, suggesting different dispersal patterns within each location. The unexpected dimensions of Black Rail demography and population structure suggested by these analyses and their potential importance for management are discussed.
机译:受到威胁的加利福尼亚黑铁路生活在茂密的沼泽植被下,鲜为人知,苍蝇无力,分布高度分散。在旧金山湾(SF湾)的8-10个大型湿地中发现了最大的铁轨,但最近在内华达山脉(Foothills)的山麓下发现了一个人口,该湿地网络由200多个小沼泽组成。使用微卫星和线粒体分析,我们的目标是确定这个最近发现的种群的起源,连通性和人口统计学。对山麓地区(n = 31),SF湾(n = 31),帝国谷(n = 6)和东海岸(n = 3)的人员进行的分析,加上严格的实力评估,对过去的历史提供了宝贵的见解和北加州该物种的当前动态,挑战了有关该物种的传统知识。山麓丘陵和SF湾种群与帝国谷种群之间的差异很大,甚至比东海岸亚种的种群之间的差异更大。数据还表明该物种在山麓地区的历史存在。 SF湾和山麓丘陵的人口在抽样区域内具有相似的估计有效人口规模,并且似乎与强烈的非对称迁移模式相关,从山麓丘陵向SF湾迁移的可能性大于反之。在山麓丘陵地区推测出了随机交配,但在SF湾中发现了沼泽和近交中的局部亚结构,这表明每个位置的散布模式不同。讨论了这些分析所暗示的黑铁人口统计学的意外规模和人口结构及其对管理的潜在重要性。

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