Vilà Carles, Sundqvist Anna-Karin, Flagstad Øystein, Seddon Jennifer, Björnerfeldt Susanne, Kojola Ilpo, Casulli Adriano, Sand Håkan, Wabakken Petter, Ellegren Hans
Department of Evolutionary Biology, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, Norbyvägen 18D, SE-752 36 Uppsala, Sweden.
Proc Biol Sci. 2003 Jan 7;270(1510):91-7. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2002.2184.
The fragmentation of populations is an increasingly important problem in the conservation of endangered species. Under these conditions, rare migration events may have important effects for the rescue of small and inbred populations. However, the relevance of such migration events to genetically depauperate natural populations is not supported by empirical data. We show here that the genetic diversity of the severely bottlenecked and geographically isolated Scandinavian population of grey wolves (Canis lupus), founded by only two individuals, was recovered by the arrival of a single immigrant. Before the arrival of this immigrant, for several generations the population comprised only a single breeding pack, necessarily involving matings between close relatives and resulting in a subsequent decline in individual heterozygosity. With the arrival of just a single immigrant, there is evidence of increased heterozygosity, significant outbreeding (inbreeding avoidance), a rapid spread of new alleles and exponential population growth. Our results imply that even rare interpopulation migration can lead to the rescue and recovery of isolated and endangered natural populations.
种群碎片化在濒危物种保护中是一个日益重要的问题。在这些情况下,罕见的迁徙事件可能对拯救小型近亲繁殖种群具有重要影响。然而,此类迁徙事件与基因匮乏的自然种群的相关性并未得到实证数据的支持。我们在此表明,由仅两只个体建立的、严重瓶颈化且地理隔离的斯堪的纳维亚灰狼(Canis lupus)种群的遗传多样性,通过一只单一移民的到来得以恢复。在这只移民到来之前,该种群在几代时间里仅由一个繁殖群体组成,必然涉及近亲交配,导致个体杂合性随后下降。随着仅一只移民的到来,有证据表明杂合性增加、显著的远交(避免近亲繁殖)、新等位基因的快速传播以及种群指数增长。我们的结果表明,即使是罕见的种群间迁徙也能导致孤立且濒危的自然种群得到拯救和恢复。