首页> 外文期刊>Biological Conservation >Conservation genetics of evolutionary lineages of the endangered mountain yellow-legged frog, Rana muscosa (Amphibia: Ranidae), in southern California.
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Conservation genetics of evolutionary lineages of the endangered mountain yellow-legged frog, Rana muscosa (Amphibia: Ranidae), in southern California.

机译:濒临灭绝的山地黄脚青蛙(iRan muscosa (Amphibia:Ranidae))在南加州的进化遗传学的保护遗传学。

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摘要

Severe population declines led to the listing of southern California Rana muscosa (Ranidae) as endangered in 2002. Nine small populations inhabit watersheds in three isolated mountain ranges, the San Gabriel, San Bernardino and San Jacinto. One population from the Dark Canyon tributary in the San Jacinto Mountains has been used to establish a captive breeding population at the San Diego Zoo Institute for Conservation Research. Because these populations may still be declining, it is critical to gather information on how genetic variation is structured in these populations and what historical inter-population connectivity existed between populations. Additionally, it is not clear whether these populations are rapidly losing genetic diversity due to population bottlenecks. Using mitochondrial and microsatellite data, we examine patterns of genetic variation in southern California and one of the last remaining populations of R. muscosa in the southern Sierra Nevada. We find low levels of genetic variation within each population and evidence of genetic bottlenecks. Additionally, substantial population structure is evident, suggesting a high degree of historical isolation within and between mountain ranges. Based on estimates from a multi-population isolation with migration analysis, these populations diversified during glacial episodes of the Pleistocene, with little gene flow during population divergence. Our data demonstrate that unique evolutionary lineages of R. muscosa occupy each mountain range in southern California and should be managed separately. The captive breeding program at Dark Canyon is promising, although mitigating the loss of neutral genetic diversity relative to the natural population might require additional breeding frogs.
机译:严重的人口下降导致2002年濒临灭绝的南加利福尼亚州蛙(Ranidae)上市。九个小种群居住在三个孤立的山脉上,即圣加布里埃尔,圣贝纳迪诺和圣哈辛托。 San Jacinto山的Dark Canyon支流中的一个种群已被用来在圣地亚哥动物园保护研究所建立圈养繁殖种群。由于这些种群可能仍在下降,因此收集有关这些种群的遗传变异如何构成以及种群之间存在何种历史种群间联系的信息至关重要。此外,尚不清楚这些种群是否由于种群瓶颈而迅速丧失了遗传多样性。利用线粒体和微卫星数据,我们检查了南加州和R的最后剩余种群之一的遗传变异模式。内华达山脉南部的muscosa 。我们发现每个人群中的遗传变异水平都很低,并且存在遗传瓶颈的证据。此外,明显的人口结构也很明显,表明山脉内和山脉之间高度的历史隔离。根据对具有迁移分析的多种群隔离的估计,这些种群在更新世冰川期发生了分化,而在种群分化期间几乎没有基因流。我们的数据表明 R的独特进化谱系。 muscosa 占据了加利福尼亚南部的每个山脉,应分开管理。在黑暗峡谷的圈养繁殖计划很有希望,尽管要减轻相对于自然种群的中性遗传多样性的丧失可能需要额外的繁殖青蛙。

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