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首页> 外文期刊>BMC Ecology >Causes and consequences of fine-scale population structure in a critically endangered freshwater seal
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Causes and consequences of fine-scale population structure in a critically endangered freshwater seal

机译:极度濒危的淡水海豹中精细规模种群结构的原因和后果

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Background Small, genetically uniform populations may face an elevated risk of extinction due to reduced environmental adaptability and individual fitness. Fragmentation can intensify these genetic adversities and, therefore, dispersal and gene flow among subpopulations within an isolated population is often essential for maintaining its viability. Using microsatellite and mtDNA data, we examined genetic diversity, spatial differentiation, interregional gene flow, and effective population sizes in the critically endangered Saimaa ringed seal (Phoca hispida saimensis), which is endemic to the large but highly fragmented Lake Saimaa in southeastern Finland. Results Microsatellite diversity within the subspecies (HE?=?0.36) ranks among the lowest thus far recorded within the order Pinnipedia, with signs of ongoing loss of individual heterozygosity, reflecting very low effective subpopulation sizes. Bayesian assignment analyses of the microsatellite data revealed clear genetic differentiation among the main breeding areas, but interregional structuring was substantially weaker in biparentally inherited microsatellites (FST?=?0.107) than in maternally inherited mtDNA (FST?=?0.444), indicating a sevenfold difference in the gene flow mediated by males versus females. Conclusions Genetic structuring in the population appears to arise from the joint effects of multiple factors, including small effective subpopulation sizes, a fragmented lacustrine habitat, and behavioural dispersal limitation. The fine-scale differentiation found in the landlocked Saimaa ringed seal is especially surprising when contrasted with marine ringed seals, which often exhibit near-panmixia among subpopulations separated by hundreds or even thousands of kilometres. Our results demonstrate that population structures of endangered animals cannot be predicted based on data on even closely related species or subspecies.
机译:背景技术由于遗传适应力和个体适应性的降低,遗传上统一的小种群可能面临更高的灭绝风险。片段化会加剧这些遗传逆境,因此,在一个孤立的种群中,亚群之间的分散和基因流动对于维持其生存能力通常至关重要。我们使用微卫星和mtDNA数据,研究了极度濒危的赛马环斑海豹(Phoca hispida saimensis)的遗传多样性,空间分异,区域间基因流和有效种群大小,该斑海豹是芬兰东南部大型但高度破碎的赛马湖特有的物种。结果亚种内的微卫星多样性(H E α=?0.36)处于迄今为止在Pinnipedia阶中记录的最低水平,具有个体杂合性持续丧失的迹象,反映出有效亚种群的数量非常低。对微卫星数据的贝叶斯赋值分析显示,主要育种区域之间存在明显的遗传分化,但双亲遗传微卫星(F ST ?== 0.107)的区域间结构明显弱于母体遗传mtDNA(F < sub> ST ?=?0.444),表明男性与女性介导的基因流差异达七倍。结论人口中的遗传结构似乎是由多种因素共同作用而产生的,这些因素包括有效的亚种群规模小,湖滨栖息地零散和行为分散限制。与海洋环状海豹相比,内陆赛马环状海豹发现的细微差别尤其令人惊讶,海洋环状海豹通常在相隔数百甚至数千公里的亚种群中表现出近乎混杂的现象。我们的结果表明,即使基于密切相关的物种或亚种的数据也无法预测濒危动物的种群结构。

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