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东南澳大利亚濒危蛇种(穴蝰属,眼镜蛇科)种群间的遗传连通性。

Genetic Connectivity among Populations of an Endangered Snake Species from Southeastern Australia (Hoplocephalus bungaroides, Elapidae).

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2011 Oct;1(2):218-27. doi: 10.1002/ece3.25.

Abstract

For endangered species that persist as apparently isolated populations within a previously more extensive range, the degree of genetic exchange between those populations is critical to conservation and management. A lack of gene flow can exacerbate impacts of threatening processes and delay or prevent colonization of sites after local extirpation. The broad-headed snake, Hoplocephalus bungaroides, is a small venomous species restricted to a handful of disjunct reserves near Sydney, Australia. Mark-recapture studies have indicated low vagility for this ambush predator, suggesting that gene flow also may be low. However, our analyses of 11 microsatellite loci from 163 snakes collected in Morton National Park, from six sites within a 10-km diameter, suggest relatively high rates of gene flow among sites. Most populations exchange genes with each other, with one large population serving as a source area and smaller populations apparently acting as sinks. About half of the juvenile snakes, for which we could reliably infer parentage, were collected from populations other than those in which we collected their putative parents. As expected from the snakes' reliance on rocky outcrops during cooler months of the year, most gene flow appears to be along sandstone plateaux rather than across the densely forested valleys that separate plateaux. The unexpectedly high rates of gene flow on a landscape scale are encouraging for future conservation of this endangered taxon. For example, wildlife managers could conserve broad-headed snakes by restoring habitats near extant source populations in areas predicted to be least affected by future climate change.

摘要

对于那些在先前更广泛的范围内仍然作为明显孤立群体存在的濒危物种,这些群体之间的基因交换程度对保护和管理至关重要。缺乏基因流动会加剧威胁过程的影响,并延迟或阻止局部灭绝后地点的殖民化。大头蛇(Hoplocephalus bungaroides)是一种小型有毒物种,仅分布在澳大利亚悉尼附近少数几个分散的保护区内。标记-重捕研究表明,这种伏击捕食者的迁移能力较低,这表明基因流动也可能较低。然而,我们对莫顿国家公园(Morton National Park)的 163 条蛇进行的 11 个微卫星基因座分析表明,各地点之间的基因流动率相对较高。大多数种群相互交换基因,一个大种群充当源区,而较小的种群则明显充当汇区。大约有一半的幼蛇(我们可以可靠地推断其亲代)是从我们收集其假定父母的种群以外的种群中收集的。正如这些蛇在一年中较凉爽的月份依赖于岩石露头这一事实所预期的那样,大多数基因流动似乎是沿着砂岩高原进行的,而不是穿过将高原分隔开来的密集森林山谷。在景观尺度上,基因流动的高速度令人鼓舞,为未来保护这一濒危分类群提供了希望。例如,野生动物管理者可以通过在未来气候变化影响最小的地区恢复现存源种群附近的栖息地来保护大头蛇。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/19fb/3287295/07c125148b20/ece30001-0218-f1.jpg

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