Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich Winterthurerstrasse 190, CH-8057, Zurich, Switzerland ; KARCH Passage Maximilien-de-Meuron 6, CH-2000, Neuchâtel, Switzerland.
Ecol Evol. 2013 Sep;3(9):2806-19. doi: 10.1002/ece3.677. Epub 2013 Jul 22.
Genetic diversity is crucial for long-term population persistence. Population loss and subsequent reduction in migration rate among the most important processes that are expected to lead to a reduction in genetic diversity and an increase in genetic differentiation. While the theory behind this is well-developed, empirical evidence from wild populations is inconsistent. Using microsatellite markers, we compared the genetic structure of populations of an amphibian species, the midwife toad (Alytes obstetricans), in four Swiss regions where the species has suffered variable levels of subpopulation extirpation. We also quantified the effects of several geographic factors on genetic structure and used a model selection approach to ascertain which of the variables were important for explaining genetic variation. Although subpopulation pairwise F ST-values were highly significant even over small geographic scales, neither any of the geographic variables nor loss of subpopulations were important factors for predicting spatial genetic structure. The absence of a signature of subpopulation loss on genetic differentiation may suggest that midwife toad subpopulations function as relatively independent units.
遗传多样性对于长期的种群存续至关重要。种群损失和随后迁徙率的降低是最重要的过程之一,预计这些过程将导致遗传多样性的减少和遗传分化的增加。虽然这一理论已经得到了很好的发展,但来自野生种群的实证证据并不一致。使用微卫星标记,我们比较了在瑞士四个地区的一种两栖动物——蟾蜍(Alytes obstetricans)的种群遗传结构,这些地区的物种经历了不同程度的亚种群灭绝。我们还量化了几个地理因素对遗传结构的影响,并使用模型选择方法来确定哪些变量对解释遗传变异很重要。尽管亚种群间的 F ST 值即使在小的地理尺度上也具有高度显著性,但没有一个地理变量或亚种群的损失是预测空间遗传结构的重要因素。在遗传分化上没有亚种群灭绝的迹象可能表明蟾蜍亚种群作为相对独立的单位发挥作用。