Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, Nash Hall Room 104, Corvallis, OR, 97331, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2013 Mar;22(6):1574-88. doi: 10.1111/mec.12198. Epub 2013 Feb 11.
There is widespread concern about impacts of land-use change on connectivity among animal and plant populations, but those impacts are difficult to quantify. Moreover, lack of knowledge regarding ecosystems before fragmentation may obscure appropriate conservation targets. We use occurrence and population genetic data to contrast connectivity for a long-lived mega-herbivore over historical and contemporary time frames. We test whether (i) historical gene flow is predicted by persistent landscape features rather than human settlement, (ii) contemporary connectivity is most affected by human settlement and (iii) recent gene flow estimates show the effects of both factors. We used 16 microsatellite loci to estimate historical and recent gene flow among African elephant (Loxodonta africana) populations in seven protected areas in Tanzania, East Africa. We used historical gene flow (FST and G'ST ) to test and optimize models of historical landscape resistance to movement. We inferred contemporary landscape resistance from elephant resource selection, assessed via walking surveys across ~15 400 km(2) of protected and unprotected lands. We used assignment-based recent gene flow estimates to optimize and test the contemporary resistance model, and to test a combined historical and contemporary model. We detected striking changes in connectivity. Historical connectivity among elephant populations was strongly influenced by slope but not human settlement, whereas contemporary connectivity was influenced most by human settlement. Recent gene flow was strongly influenced by slope but was also correlated with contemporary resistance. Inferences across multiple timescales can better inform conservation efforts on large and complex landscapes, while mitigating the fundamental problem of shifting baselines in conservation.
人们普遍关注土地利用变化对动植物种群连通性的影响,但这些影响难以量化。此外,在进行分割之前对生态系统缺乏了解,可能会使适当的保护目标变得模糊。我们利用现存量和种群遗传数据,对比了一种长寿巨型食草动物在历史和现代时间框架下的连通性。我们检验了以下假设:(i)历史基因流是否由持久的景观特征而不是人类住区来预测;(ii)当代连通性是否受人类住区的影响最大;(iii)近期基因流估计值是否显示了这两个因素的综合影响。我们在东非坦桑尼亚的七个保护区中,使用 16 个微卫星基因座来估计非洲象(Loxodonta africana)种群的历史和近期基因流。我们使用历史基因流(FST 和 G'ST )来检验和优化历史景观移动阻力模型。我们从大象资源选择推断出当代景观阻力,这是通过在保护区和非保护区内约 15400 平方公里的范围内进行步行调查来评估的。我们使用基于分配的近期基因流估计来优化和检验当代阻力模型,并检验历史和当代综合模型。我们发现连通性发生了显著变化。历史上,大象种群之间的连通性受到坡度的强烈影响,但不受人类住区的影响,而当代连通性则主要受到人类住区的影响。近期基因流受到坡度的强烈影响,但也与当代阻力相关。跨多个时间尺度的推断可以更好地为大型和复杂景观的保护工作提供信息,同时减轻保护中基线不断变化的根本问题。