Levy Hila, Clucas Gemma V, Rogers Alex D, Leaché Adam D, Ciborowski Kate L, Polito Michael J, Lynch Heather J, Dunn Michael J, Hart Tom
Department of Zoology University of Oxford South Parks Road Oxford OX1 3PS UK; USAF Air Force Institute of Technology 2950 Hobson Way WPAFB Ohio 45433-7765.
Department of Zoology University of Oxford South Parks Road Oxford OX1 3PS UK; Ocean and Earth Sciences University of Southampton Waterfront Campus European Way Southampton SO14 3ZH UK.
Ecol Evol. 2016 Feb 20;6(6):1834-53. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1929. eCollection 2016 Mar.
Climate change, fisheries' pressure on penguin prey, and direct human disturbance of wildlife have all been implicated in causing large shifts in the abundance and distribution of penguins in the Southern Ocean. Without mark-recapture studies, understanding how colonies form and, by extension, how ranges shift is challenging. Genetic studies, particularly focused on newly established colonies, provide a snapshot of colonization and can reveal the extent to which shifts in abundance and occupancy result from changes in demographic rates (e.g., reproduction and survival) or migration among suitable patches of habitat. Here, we describe the population structure of a colonial seabird breeding across a large latitudinal range in the Southern Ocean. Using multilocus microsatellite genotype data from 510 Gentoo penguin (Pygoscelis papua) individuals from 14 colonies along the Scotia Arc and Antarctic Peninsula, together with mitochondrial DNA data, we find strong genetic differentiation between colonies north and south of the Polar Front, that coincides geographically with the taxonomic boundary separating the subspecies P. p. papua and P. p. ellsworthii. Using a discrete Bayesian phylogeographic approach, we show that southern Gentoos expanded from a possible glacial refuge in the center of their current range, colonizing regions to the north and south through rare, long-distance dispersal. Our findings show that this dispersal is important for new colony foundation and range expansion in a seabird species that ordinarily exhibits high levels of natal philopatry, though persistent oceanographic features serve as barriers to movement.
气候变化、渔业对企鹅猎物的压力以及人类对野生动物的直接干扰,都被认为是导致南大洋企鹅数量和分布发生巨大变化的原因。如果没有标记重捕研究,了解企鹅群落如何形成,以及进而了解其分布范围如何变化是具有挑战性的。基因研究,特别是针对新建立的群落,提供了一个殖民化的快照,并可以揭示数量和占有率的变化在多大程度上是由人口统计学比率(例如繁殖和生存)的变化或适宜栖息地斑块之间的迁移导致的。在这里,我们描述了一种在南大洋广阔纬度范围内繁殖的群居海鸟的种群结构。利用来自斯科舍弧和南极半岛沿线14个群落的510只巴布亚企鹅(Pygoscelis papua)个体的多位点微卫星基因型数据,以及线粒体DNA数据,我们发现极地锋以北和以南的群落之间存在强烈的遗传分化,这在地理上与区分巴布亚企鹅亚种P. p. papua和P. p. ellsworthii的分类边界相吻合。使用离散贝叶斯系统地理学方法,我们表明,南部巴布亚企鹅从其当前分布范围中心的一个可能的冰川避难所扩张而来,通过罕见的长距离扩散在北部和南部地区殖民。我们的研究结果表明,这种扩散对于一种通常表现出高度出生地留居性的海鸟物种的新群落建立和分布范围扩张很重要,尽管持续的海洋学特征成为了其移动的障碍。