Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology, Cornell University, 159 Sapsucker Woods Road, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA.
Biol Lett. 2012 Aug 23;8(4):582-5. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2011.1244. Epub 2012 Feb 22.
Habitat gap size has been negatively linked to movement probability in several species occupying fragmented landscapes. How these effects on movement behaviour in turn affect the genetic structure of fragmented populations at local scales is less well known. We tested, and confirmed, the hypothesis that genetic differentiation among adjacent populations of Florida scrub jays--an endangered bird species with poor dispersal abilities and a high degree of habitat specialization--increases with the width of habitat gaps separating them. This relationship was not an artefact of simple isolation-by-distance, as genetic distance was not correlated with the Euclidean distance between geographical centroids of the adjacent populations. Our results suggest that gap size affects movement behaviour even at remarkably local spatial scales, producing direct consequences on the genetic structure of fragmented populations. This finding shows that conserving genetic continuity for specialist species within fragmented habitat requires maintenance or restoration of preserve networks in which habitat gaps do not exceed a species-specific threshold distance.
生境间隙大小与几种在破碎景观中栖息的物种的移动概率呈负相关。这些对移动行为的影响反过来如何影响局部尺度上破碎种群的遗传结构,这一点知之甚少。我们测试并证实了这样一个假设,即佛罗里达灌丛鸦(一种濒危鸟类,扩散能力差,栖息地专门化程度高)相邻种群之间的遗传分化随着分隔它们的生境间隙宽度的增加而增加。这种关系不是简单的隔离距离的人为产物,因为遗传距离与相邻种群地理中心之间的欧几里得距离没有相关性。我们的结果表明,即使在非常局部的空间尺度上,间隙大小也会影响移动行为,对破碎种群的遗传结构产生直接影响。这一发现表明,在破碎的栖息地中保护专门物种的遗传连续性需要维持或恢复保护区网络,使栖息地间隙不超过特定物种的阈值距离。