Ernest Holly B, Vickers T Winston, Morrison Scott A, Buchalski Michael R, Boyce Walter M
Wildlife Health Center, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States of America; Wildlife and Ecology Unit, Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States of America.
Wildlife Health Center, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Oct 8;9(10):e107985. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107985. eCollection 2014.
Pumas (Puma concolor; also known as mountain lions and cougars) in southern California live among a burgeoning human population of roughly 20 million people. Yet little is known of the consequences of attendant habitat loss and fragmentation, and human-caused puma mortality to puma population viability and genetic diversity. We examined genetic status of pumas in coastal mountains within the Peninsular Ranges south of Los Angeles, in San Diego, Riverside, and Orange counties. The Santa Ana Mountains are bounded by urbanization to the west, north, and east, and are separated from the eastern Peninsular Ranges to the southeast by a ten lane interstate highway (I-15). We analyzed DNA samples from 97 pumas sampled between 2001 and 2012. Genotypic data for forty-six microsatellite loci revealed that pumas sampled in the Santa Ana Mountains (n = 42) displayed lower genetic diversity than pumas from nearly every other region in California tested (n = 257), including those living in the Peninsular Ranges immediately to the east across I-15 (n = 55). Santa Ana Mountains pumas had high average pairwise relatedness, high individual internal relatedness, a low estimated effective population size, and strong evidence of a bottleneck and isolation from other populations in California. These and ecological findings provide clear evidence that Santa Ana Mountains pumas have been experiencing genetic impacts related to barriers to gene flow, and are a warning signal to wildlife managers and land use planners that mitigation efforts will be needed to stem further genetic and demographic decay in the Santa Ana Mountains puma population.
美洲狮(美洲狮;也被称为山狮和美洲豹)生活在南加州迅速增长的约2000万人口之中。然而,关于随之而来的栖息地丧失和破碎化以及人类导致的美洲狮死亡对美洲狮种群生存能力和遗传多样性的影响,我们知之甚少。我们研究了洛杉矶以南半岛山脉沿海山区、圣地亚哥、河滨和奥兰治县的美洲狮的遗传状况。圣安娜山的西部、北部和东部都被城市化所包围,并且被一条十车道的州际公路(I-15)与东南部的东部半岛山脉隔开。我们分析了2001年至2012年间采集的97只美洲狮的DNA样本。对46个微卫星位点的基因型数据显示,在圣安娜山采集的美洲狮(n = 42)的遗传多样性低于加利福尼亚州几乎所有其他测试地区的美洲狮(n = 257),包括那些生活在I-15以东紧邻半岛山脉的美洲狮(n = 55)。圣安娜山的美洲狮平均成对亲缘关系高、个体内部亲缘关系高、估计有效种群规模低,并且有明显的瓶颈效应以及与加利福尼亚州其他种群隔离的证据。这些以及生态学研究结果提供了明确的证据,表明圣安娜山的美洲狮一直在经历与基因流动障碍相关的遗传影响,这对野生动物管理者和土地利用规划者来说是一个警示信号,即需要采取缓解措施来阻止圣安娜山美洲狮种群进一步的遗传和种群数量衰退。