Guschanski Katerina, Caillaud Damien, Robbins Martha M, Vigilant Linda
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, Leipzig 04103, Germany.
Curr Biol. 2008 Nov 25;18(22):1809-14. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2008.10.031.
Dispersal, one of the key life-history features of a species, influences gene flow and, consequently, the genetic structuring of populations. Landscape characteristics such as rivers, mountains, or habitat fragmentation affect dispersal and result in broad-scale genetic structuring of various mammalian species [1-5]. However, less attention has been paid to studying how dispersal is influenced by finer-scale microgeographic variation in a continuous habitat. Here we investigate the genetic structure of a closed population of approximately 300 endangered mountain gorillas living in multiple groups in a small (331 km(2)) forest in southwestern Uganda. In a species in which both sexes routinely disperse, population genetic structure in females was influenced by distance, altitude, and plant community composition, whereas males were not geographically structured. The effect of distance fits the observed tendency of females to transfer to neighboring groups, whereas the effects of altitude and vegetation reflect the changing species composition of locally available food resources. These results suggest that individual dietary preferences are important even in a highly mobile species living amid abundant food, and we propose that preference for natal habitats will influence dispersal decisions in many other vertebrate taxa.
扩散是物种关键的生活史特征之一,它影响基因流动,进而影响种群的遗传结构。诸如河流、山脉或栖息地破碎化等景观特征会影响扩散,并导致各种哺乳动物物种出现大规模的遗传结构[1 - 5]。然而,对于在连续栖息地中,扩散如何受到更精细尺度的微观地理变异影响的研究却较少受到关注。在此,我们调查了乌干达西南部一个面积较小(331平方公里)的森林中,生活在多个群体里的约300只濒危山地大猩猩的封闭种群的遗传结构。在一个两性通常都会扩散的物种中,雌性的种群遗传结构受距离、海拔和植物群落组成的影响,而雄性则没有地理结构。距离的影响符合观察到的雌性转移到相邻群体的趋势,而海拔和植被的影响则反映了当地可利用食物资源物种组成的变化。这些结果表明,即使在食物丰富的高度移动物种中,个体的饮食偏好也很重要,并且我们提出对出生地栖息地的偏好将影响许多其他脊椎动物类群的扩散决策。