Vignieri Sacha N
Burke Museum and Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2005 Jun;14(7):1925-37. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2005.02568.x.
In species affiliated with heterogeneous habitat, we expect gene flow to be restricted due to constraints placed on individual movement by habitat boundaries. This is likely to impact both individual dispersal and connectivity between populations. In this study, a GIS-based landscape genetics approach was used, in combination with fine-scale spatial autocorrelation analysis and the estimation of recent intersubpopulation migration rates, to infer patterns of dispersal and migration in the riparian-affiliated Pacific jumping mouse (Zapus trinotatus). A total of 228 individuals were sampled from nine subpopulations across a system of three rivers and genotyped at eight microsatellite loci. Significant spatial autocorrelation among individuals revealed a pattern of fine-scale spatial genetic structure indicative of limited dispersal. Geographical distances between pairwise subpopulations were defined following four criteria: (i) Euclidean distance, and three landscape-specific distances, (ii) river distance (distance travelled along the river only), (iii) overland distance (similar to Euclidean, but includes elevation), and (iv) habitat-path distance (a least-cost path distance that models movement along habitat pathways). Pairwise Mantel tests were used to test for a correlation between genetic distance and each of the geographical distances. Significant correlations were found between genetic distance and both the overland and habitat-path distances; however, the correlation with habitat-path distance was stronger. Lastly, estimates of recent migration rates revealed that migration occurs not only within drainages but also across large topographic barriers. These results suggest that patterns of dispersal and migration in Pacific jumping mice are largely determined by habitat connectivity.
在与异质栖息地相关联的物种中,我们预计由于栖息地边界对个体移动的限制,基因流动会受到限制。这可能会影响个体扩散以及种群之间的连通性。在本研究中,采用了基于地理信息系统(GIS)的景观遗传学方法,结合精细尺度空间自相关分析和近期亚种群间迁移率估计,来推断河岸相关的太平洋跳鼠(Zapus trinotatus)的扩散和迁移模式。从三条河流系统中的九个亚种群共采集了228个个体,并在八个微卫星位点进行了基因分型。个体间显著的空间自相关揭示了一种精细尺度的空间遗传结构模式,表明扩散有限。成对亚种群之间的地理距离按照四个标准定义:(i)欧几里得距离,以及三个特定于景观的距离,(ii)河流距离(仅沿河流移动的距离),(iii)陆上距离(类似于欧几里得距离,但包括海拔),以及(iv)栖息地路径距离(一种模拟沿栖息地路径移动的最小成本路径距离)。使用成对曼特尔检验来检验遗传距离与每个地理距离之间的相关性。在遗传距离与陆上距离和栖息地路径距离之间均发现了显著相关性;然而,与栖息地路径距离的相关性更强。最后,近期迁移率估计表明,迁移不仅发生在流域内,而且跨越大型地形障碍。这些结果表明,太平洋跳鼠的扩散和迁移模式在很大程度上由栖息地连通性决定。