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首页> 外文期刊>Landscape Ecology >Fine-scale effects of habitat loss and fragmentation despite large-scale gene flow for some regionally declining woodland bird species
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Fine-scale effects of habitat loss and fragmentation despite large-scale gene flow for some regionally declining woodland bird species

机译:尽管一些区域性下降的林地鸟类物种存在大规模基因流,但栖息地丧失和破碎化的细微影响

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Habitat loss and associated fragmentation effects are well-recognised threats to biodiversity. Loss of functional connectivity (mobility, gene flow and demographic continuity) could result in population decline in altered habitat, because smaller, isolated populations are more vulnerable to extinction. We tested whether substantial habitat reduction plus fragmentation is associated with reduced gene flow in three 'decliner' woodland-dependent bird species (eastern yellow robin, weebill and spotted pardalote) identified in earlier work to have declined disproportionately in heavily fragmented landscapes in the Box-Ironbark forest region in north-central Victoria, Australia. For these three decliners, and one 'tolerant' species (striated pardalote), we compared patterns of genetic diversity, relatedness, effective population size, sex-ratios and genic (allele frequency) differentiation among landscapes of different total tree cover, identified population subdivision at the regional scale, and explored fine-scale genotypic (individual-based genetic signature) structure. Unexpectedly high genetic connectivity across the study region was detected for 'decliner' and 'tolerant' species. Power analysis simulations suggest that moderate reductions in gene flow should have been detectable. However, there was evidence of local negative effects of reduced habitat extent and structural connectivity: slightly lower effective population sizes, lower genetic diversity, higher within-site relatedness and altered sex-ratios (for weebill and eastern yellow robin) in 10 x 10 km 'landscapes' with low vegetation cover. We conclude that reduced structural connectivity in the Box-Ironbark ecosystem may still allow sufficient gene flow to avoid the harmful effects of inbreeding in our study species. Although there may still be negative consequences of fragmentation for demographic connectivity, the high genetic connectivity of mobile bird species in this system suggests that reconnecting isolated habitat patches may be less important than increasing habitat extent and/or quality if these need to be traded off.
机译:生境的丧失和相关的碎片化影响是公认的对生物多样性的威胁。功能连通性(活动性,基因流和人口连续性)的丧失可能会导致栖息地改变的人口减少,因为较小的孤立种群更容易灭绝。我们测试了在早期工作中发现的三种“衰落型”林地相关鸟类(东部黄知更鸟,韦比尔和斑头鹦鹉)中大量栖息地的减少和破碎是否与基因流量的减少有关,这些物种在Box-铁皮森林地区在澳大利亚中北部维多利亚。对于这三个下降者和一个“耐受”物种(条纹扁桃体),我们比较了不同树种总覆盖景观之间的遗传多样性,亲缘关系,有效种群数量,性别比和基因(等位基因频率)分化的模式,确定了种群细分在区域范围内,并探索了精细的基因型(基于个体的遗传标记)结构。在“研究区”和“耐受”物种中检测到整个研究区域的高遗传连通性。功率分析模拟表明,应该可以检测到基因流量的适度减少。但是,有证据表明,栖息地范围缩小和结构连通性降低对当地产生了负面影响:有效种群数量略低,遗传多样性降低,厂内亲缘关系较高以及10 x 10 km内的性别比(对于鼬鼠和东部黄知更鸟)有所改变植被覆盖率低的“景观”。我们得出的结论是,Box-Ironbark生态系统中结构连通性的降低可能仍会允许足够的基因流,以避免近亲繁殖对我们研究物种的有害影响。尽管碎片化可能仍然会对人口连通性产生负面影响,但在该系统中,流动鸟类物种的高遗传连通性表明,如果需要权衡这些问题,重新连接孤立的栖息地补丁可能不如增加栖息地范围和/或质量重要。

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