Ratnayeke Shyamala, Tuskan Gerald A, Pelton Michael R
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville 37996, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2002 Jun;11(6):1115-24. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-294x.2002.01505.x.
Among mammals, some of the most common types of cohesive social groupings originate from natal philopatry through the extended mother family. This retention of females within social groups (i.e. the nonrandom dispersion of female relatives in space) should affect population genetic structure. We examined the relationship between genetic relatedness and female spatial organization in a wild population of the North-American raccoon, Procyon lotor, a solitary carnivore in east Tennessee. Multilocus genetic band-sharing data and 3(1/2) years of radiotelemetry observations were used to study the spatial and genetic relationships among 38 adult females. DNA amplification employing primers of arbitrary sequence (random amplified polymorphic DNA; RAPD) indicated that female philopatry in raccoons led to a greater likelihood of neighbours being more related than expected by chance. Genetic distance based on RAPD band frequency was positively correlated with spatial distance among females (P = 0.0001) and genetic similarity was positively correlated with the extent of home-range overlap (P = 0.0028). Philopatry seemed biased towards females; average female-female similarities were greater than average male-male similarities (P = 0.0001), or average male-female similarities (P = 0.0001). High home-range overlap among some females with low or moderate levels of band sharing indicated that maternal inheritance of space was not a prerequisite for establishing or sharing home ranges. Female philopatry was the most probable explanation for the nonrandom spatial and genetic association of raccoons in east Tennessee.
在哺乳动物中,一些最常见的紧密社会群体类型起源于通过扩展的母系家族形成的出生留居现象。雌性在社会群体中的这种留居(即雌性亲属在空间上的非随机分布)应该会影响种群的遗传结构。我们研究了北美浣熊(Procyon lotor)野生种群中遗传相关性与雌性空间组织之间的关系,北美浣熊是田纳西州东部的一种独居食肉动物。利用多位点遗传带共享数据和3年半的无线电遥测观测数据,研究了38只成年雌性浣熊之间的空间和遗传关系。使用任意序列引物进行DNA扩增(随机扩增多态性DNA;RAPD)表明,浣熊中的雌性留居现象导致邻居之间具有比随机预期更高的遗传相关性。基于RAPD带频率的遗传距离与雌性之间的空间距离呈正相关(P = 0.0001),遗传相似性与家域重叠程度呈正相关(P = 0.0028)。留居现象似乎偏向于雌性;雌性之间的平均相似性大于雄性之间的平均相似性(P = 0.0001),也大于雄性与雌性之间的平均相似性(P = 0.0001)。一些具有低或中等水平带共享的雌性之间家域高度重叠,这表明空间的母系遗传不是建立或共享家域的先决条件。雌性留居现象是田纳西州东部浣熊非随机空间和遗传关联的最可能解释。