首页> 外文期刊>Heredity: An International Journal of Genetics >Landscape genetics informs mesohabitat preference and conservation priorities for a surrogate indicator species in a highly fragmented river system
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Landscape genetics informs mesohabitat preference and conservation priorities for a surrogate indicator species in a highly fragmented river system

机译:景观遗传学为高度破碎的河流系统中替代指示物种的中生境偏好和保护优先事项提供了信息

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Poor dispersal species represent conservative benchmarks for biodiversity management because they provide insights into ecological processes influenced by habitat fragmentation that are less evident in more dispersive organisms. Here we used the poorly dispersive and threatened river blackfish (Gadopsis marmoratus) as a surrogate indicator system for assessing the effects of fragmentation in highly modified river basins and for prioritizing basin-wide management strategies. We combined individual, population and landscape-based approaches to analyze genetic variation in samples spanning the distribution of the species in Australia's Murray-Darling Basin, one of the world's most degraded freshwater systems. Our results indicate that G. marmoratus displays the hallmark of severe habitat fragmentation with notably scattered, small and demographically isolated populations with very low genetic diversity-a pattern found not only between regions and catchments but also between streams within catchments. By using hierarchically nested population sampling and assessing relationships between genetic uniqueness and genetic diversity across populations, we developed a spatial management framework that includes the selection of populations in need of genetic rescue. Landscape genetics provided an environmental criterion to identify associations between landscape features and ecological processes. Our results further our understanding of the impact that habitat quality and quantity has on habitat specialists with similarly low dispersal. They should also have practical applications for prioritizing both large-and small-scale conservation management actions for organisms inhabiting highly fragmented ecosystems.
机译:扩散性差的物种代表了生物多样性管理的保守基准,因为它们提供了对受生境破碎化影响的生态过程的见解,而这些过程在更分散的生物中不太明显。在这里,我们使用分散性差和受威胁的河流黑鱼(Gadopsis marmoratus)作为替代指标系统,用于评估高度改变的河流流域破碎化的影响,并确定全流域管理策略的优先次序。我们结合了个体、种群和基于景观的方法,分析了澳大利亚墨累-达令盆地(世界上退化最严重的淡水系统之一)物种分布样本的遗传变异。我们的结果表明,G. marmoratus表现出严重栖息地破碎化的标志,具有明显分散,小和人口孤立的种群,遗传多样性非常低 - 这种模式不仅在区域和集水区之间发现,而且在集水区内的溪流之间也发现。通过使用分层嵌套的种群抽样和评估种群间遗传独特性和遗传多样性之间的关系,我们开发了一个空间管理框架,其中包括选择需要遗传拯救的种群。景观遗传学为确定景观特征与生态过程之间的关联提供了环境标准。我们的研究结果进一步加深了我们对栖息地质量和数量对同样低扩散的栖息地专家的影响的理解。它们还应具有实际应用,以便对栖息在高度分散的生态系统中的生物体采取大规模和小规模的保护管理行动。

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