Leonard Jennifer A, Vilà Carles, Wayne Robert K
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1606, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2005 Jan;14(1):9-17. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2004.02389.x.
By the mid 20th century, the grey wolf (Canis lupus) was exterminated from most of the conterminous United States (cUS) and Mexico. However, because wolves disperse over long distances, extant populations in Canada and Alaska might have retained a substantial proportion of the genetic diversity once found in the cUS. We analysed mitochondrial DNA sequences of 34 pre-extermination wolves and found that they had more than twice the diversity of their modern conspecifics, implying a historic population size of several hundred thousand wolves in the western cUS and Mexico. Further, two-thirds of the haplotypes found in the historic sample are unique. Sequences from Mexican grey wolves (C. l. baileyi) and some historic grey wolves defined a unique southern clade supporting a much wider geographical mandate for the reintroduction of Mexican wolves than currently planned. Our results highlight the genetic consequences of population extinction within Ice Age refugia and imply that restoration goals for grey wolves in the western cUS include far less area and target vastly lower population sizes than existed historically.
到20世纪中叶,灰狼(Canis lupus)在美国本土大部分地区(cUS)和墨西哥已被灭绝。然而,由于狼会远距离扩散,加拿大和阿拉斯加现存的种群可能保留了曾经在美国本土发现的大部分遗传多样性。我们分析了34只灭绝前的狼的线粒体DNA序列,发现它们的多样性是现代同类的两倍多,这意味着美国西部和墨西哥历史上的狼群数量达数十万只。此外,在历史样本中发现的单倍型有三分之二是独特的。墨西哥灰狼(C. l. baileyi)和一些历史上的灰狼的序列定义了一个独特的南部进化枝,这表明墨西哥狼重新引入的地理范围比目前计划的要广泛得多。我们的研究结果突出了冰河时代避难所内种群灭绝的遗传后果,并表明美国西部灰狼的恢复目标所涵盖的面积远远小于历史上的面积,目标种群规模也远低于历史上的规模。