Hale M L, Lurz P W, Shirley M D, Rushton S, Fuller R M, Wolff K
Department of Agricultural and Environmental Science, Centre for Life Science Modelling, University of Newcastle, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, NE1 7RU, UK.
Science. 2001 Sep 21;293(5538):2246-8. doi: 10.1126/science.1062574.
Landscape management practices that alter the degree of habitat fragmentation can significantly affect the genetic structure of animal populations. British red squirrels use "stepping stone" patches of habitat to move considerable distances through a fragmented habitat. Over the past few decades, the planting of a large conifer forest has connected groups of forest fragments in the north of England with those in southern Scotland. This "defragmentation" of the landscape has resulted in substantial genetic mixing of Scottish and Cumbrian genes in squirrel populations up to 100 kilometers from the site of the new forest. These results have implications for the conservation management of animal and plant species in fragmented landscapes such as those found in Britain.
改变栖息地破碎化程度的景观管理措施会显著影响动物种群的遗传结构。英国红松鼠利用小块栖息地作为“跳板”,在破碎化的栖息地中远距离移动。在过去几十年里,大片针叶林的种植将英格兰北部的森林片段群与苏格兰南部的森林片段连接了起来。这种景观的“去碎片化”导致在距离新森林所在地达100公里的松鼠种群中,苏格兰基因和坎布里亚基因发生了大量的基因混合。这些结果对英国等地破碎化景观中动植物物种的保护管理具有启示意义。