Cabe P R, Page R B, Hanlon T J, Aldrich M E, Connors L, Marsh D M
Department of Biology, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, VA 24450, USA.
Heredity (Edinb). 2007 Jan;98(1):53-60. doi: 10.1038/sj.hdy.6800905. Epub 2006 Sep 27.
Several recent studies have shown that amphibian populations may exhibit high genetic subdivision in areas with recent fragmentation and urban development. Less is known about the potential for genetic differentiation in continuous habitats. We studied genetic differentiation of red-backed salamanders (Plethodon cinereus) across a 2-km transect through continuous forest in Virginia, USA. Mark-recapture studies suggest very little dispersal for this species, whereas homing experiments and post-Pleistocene range expansion both suggest greater dispersal abilities. We used six microsatellite loci to examine genetic population structure and differentiation between eight subpopulations of red-backed salamanders at distances from 200 m to 2 km. We also used several methods to extrapolate dispersal frequencies and test for sex-biased dispersal. We found small, but detectable differentiation among populations, even at distances as small as 200 m. Differentiation was closely correlated with distance and both Mantel tests and assignment tests were consistent with an isolation-by-distance model for the population. Extrapolations of intergenerational variance in spatial position (sigma(2)<15 m(2)) and pair-wise dispersal frequencies (4 Nm < 25 for plots separated by 300 m) both suggest limited gene flow. Additionally, tests for sex-biased dispersal imply that dispersal frequency is similarly low for both sexes. We suggest that these low levels of gene flow and the infrequent dispersal observed in mark-recapture studies may be reconciled with homing ability and range expansion if dispersing animals rarely succeed in breeding in saturated habitats, if dispersal is flexible depending on the availability of habitat, or if dispersal frequency varies across the geographic range of red-backed salamanders.
最近的几项研究表明,在近期出现碎片化和城市发展的地区,两栖动物种群可能表现出高度的遗传分化。对于连续栖息地中遗传分化的潜力,人们了解较少。我们研究了美国弗吉尼亚州一片连续森林中一条2公里长样带上红背蝾螈(Plethodon cinereus)的遗传分化情况。标记重捕研究表明该物种的扩散极少,而归巢实验和更新世后的范围扩张都表明其具有更强的扩散能力。我们使用六个微卫星位点来研究红背蝾螈八个亚种群在200米到2公里距离之间的遗传种群结构和分化情况。我们还使用了几种方法来推断扩散频率并检验性别偏向扩散。我们发现种群之间存在微小但可检测到的分化,即使在距离仅200米的情况下也是如此。分化与距离密切相关,曼特尔检验和分配检验都与种群的距离隔离模型一致。对空间位置的代际方差(sigma(2)<15 m(2))和成对扩散频率(对于相距300米的样地,4 Nm < 25)的推断都表明基因流有限。此外,性别偏向扩散检验表明两性的扩散频率同样较低。我们认为,如果扩散个体在饱和栖息地中很少成功繁殖,如果扩散取决于栖息地的可利用性而具有灵活性,或者如果扩散频率在红背蝾螈的地理分布范围内有所不同,那么这些低水平的基因流以及在标记重捕研究中观察到的不频繁扩散,可能与归巢能力和范围扩张相协调。