Bonett Ronald M, Kozak Kenneth H, Vieites David R, Bare Alison, Wooten Jessica A, Trauth Stanley E
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology and Department of Integrative Biology, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
BMC Ecol. 2007 Sep 7;7:7. doi: 10.1186/1472-6785-7-7.
In most regions of the world human influences on the distribution of flora and fauna predate complete biotic surveys. In some cases this challenges our ability to discriminate native from introduced species. This distinction is particularly critical for isolated populations, because relicts of native species may need to be conserved, whereas introduced species may require immediate eradication. Recently an isolated population of seal salamanders, Desmognathus monticola, was discovered on the Ozark Plateau, approximately 700 km west of its broad continuous distribution in the Appalachian Mountains of eastern North America. Using Nested Clade Analysis (NCA) we test whether the Ozark isolate results from population fragmentation (a natural relict) or long distance dispersal (a human-mediated introduction).
Despite its broad distribution in the Appalachian Mountains, the primary haplotype diversity of D. monticola is restricted to less than 2.5% of the distribution in the extreme southern Appalachians, where genetic diversity is high for other co-distributed species. By intensively sampling this genetically diverse region we located haplotypes identical to the Ozark isolate. Nested Clade Analysis supports the hypothesis that the Ozark population was introduced, but it was necessary to include haplotypes that are less than or equal to 0.733% divergent from the Ozark population in order to arrive at this conclusion. These critical haplotypes only occur in < 1.2% of the native distribution and NCA excluding them suggest that the Ozark population is a natural relict.
Our analyses suggest that the isolated population of D. monticola from the Ozarks is not native to the region and may need to be extirpated rather than conserved, particularly because of its potential negative impacts on endemic Ozark stream salamander communities. Diagnosing a species as introduced may require locating nearly identical haplotypes in the known native distribution, which may be a major undertaking. Our study demonstrates the importance of considering comparative phylogeographic information for locating critical haplotypes when distinguishing native from introduced species.
在世界上大多数地区,人类对动植物分布的影响早于全面的生物调查。在某些情况下,这对我们区分本地物种和外来物种的能力构成了挑战。这种区分对于孤立种群尤为关键,因为本地物种的遗迹可能需要保护,而外来物种可能需要立即根除。最近,在奥扎克高原发现了一个孤立的海豹蝾螈种群,即蒙蒂科尔蝾螈(Desmognathus monticola),该高原位于北美东部阿巴拉契亚山脉广泛连续分布区域以西约700公里处。我们使用嵌套进化枝分析(NCA)来测试奥扎克孤立种群是种群片段化(自然遗迹)还是长距离扩散(人类介导的引入)的结果。
尽管蒙蒂科尔蝾螈在阿巴拉契亚山脉分布广泛,但其主要单倍型多样性仅限于阿巴拉契亚山脉最南端分布区域的不到2.5%,而在该区域其他共分布物种的遗传多样性很高。通过对这个遗传多样的区域进行密集采样,我们找到了与奥扎克孤立种群相同的单倍型。嵌套进化枝分析支持奥扎克种群是被引入的这一假设,但为了得出这一结论,有必要纳入与奥扎克种群差异小于或等于0.733%的单倍型。这些关键单倍型仅出现在不到1.2%的原生分布区域中,排除它们的NCA表明奥扎克种群是自然遗迹。
我们的分析表明,来自奥扎克的蒙蒂科尔蝾螈孤立种群并非该地区的原生种群,可能需要根除而非保护,特别是因为它可能对奥扎克本地溪流蝾螈群落产生负面影响。将一个物种诊断为外来引入物种可能需要在已知的原生分布区域中找到几乎相同的单倍型,这可能是一项重大任务。我们的研究表明,在区分本地物种和外来物种时,考虑比较系统地理学信息以定位关键单倍型非常重要。