Sacks Benjamin N, Mitchell Brian R, Williams Christen L, Ernest Holly B
Wildlife and Ecology Unit, Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California-Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616-8744, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2005 Apr;14(4):1241-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2005.02473.x.
A recent region-wide study determined that the central California coyote (Canis latrans) population was genetically subdivided according to habitat bioregions, supporting the hypothesis that coyotes exhibit a dispersal bias toward their natal habitat type. Here, we further investigated this hypothesis using radio-collared coyotes captured on a 150-km(2) study site on the border of (i.e. overlapping) two bioregions (Great Valley and Cascade Mountains). As predicted, most coyotes were assigned (based on a priori genetic criteria) to genetic clusters corresponding to one of these two bioregions. All of those assigned to the Great Valley genetic cluster were caught in (and for the most part, remained in) the Great Valley bioregion. However, contrary to expectations, the coyotes assigned to the Cascades genetic cluster occurred commonly in both bioregions. Nearly all resident individuals on the study site, regardless of the particular bioregion, were assigned to the Cascades genetic cluster, whereas a sizable fraction of nonresident (transient or dispersing) coyotes caught in the Great Valley bioregion were assigned to the Great Valley cluster. Even among resident coyotes, interrelatedness of packs was greater within than between bioregions, and packs with territories overlapping both bioregions were more closely related to those with territories completely within the Cascades bioregion than territories completely within the Great Valley bioregion. Finally, direct estimates indicated that gene flow was twice as high from the Cascades bioregion to the Great Valley bioregion than in the reverse direction. Collectively, these findings reveal the anatomy of the genetic subdivision as beginning abruptly at the bioregion boundary and ending diffusely within the Great Valley bioregion.
最近一项全区域范围的研究确定,加利福尼亚中部的郊狼(犬属)种群根据栖息地生物区域在基因上存在细分,这支持了郊狼对其出生栖息地类型表现出扩散偏好的假说。在此,我们使用在两个生物区域(大谷地和喀斯喀特山脉)边界(即重叠区域)的一个150平方千米研究地点捕获的佩戴无线电项圈的郊狼,进一步研究了这一假说。正如预测的那样,大多数郊狼(基于先验基因标准)被归类到与这两个生物区域之一相对应的基因簇中。所有被归类到大谷地基因簇的郊狼都是在大谷地生物区域捕获的(并且在很大程度上,一直留在该区域)。然而,与预期相反,被归类到喀斯喀特基因簇的郊狼在两个生物区域都很常见。研究地点几乎所有的常驻个体,无论属于哪个特定的生物区域,都被归类到喀斯喀特基因簇,而在大谷地生物区域捕获的相当一部分非常驻(短暂停留或扩散中的)郊狼被归类到大谷地基因簇。即使在常驻郊狼中,群体内部的关联性在生物区域内部比在生物区域之间更强,并且领地跨越两个生物区域的群体与领地完全在喀斯喀特生物区域内的群体的关系,比与领地完全在大谷地生物区域内的群体的关系更密切。最后,直接估计表明,从喀斯喀特生物区域到大谷地生物区域的基因流动是反向流动的两倍。总体而言,这些发现揭示了基因细分的格局,即从生物区域边界处突然开始,并在大谷地生物区域内扩散结束。