Murray-Dickson Gillian, Ghazali Muhammad, Ogden Rob, Brown Rafe, Auliya Mark
Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) WildGenes Laboratory, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Trace Wildlife Forensics Network, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2017 Aug 17;12(8):e0182049. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0182049. eCollection 2017.
As an important economic natural resource in Southeast Asia, reticulated pythons (Malayopython reticulatus ssp.) are primarily harvested from the wild for their skins-which are prized in the luxury leather goods industry. Trade dynamics of this CITES Appendix II listed species are complex and management approaches on the country or regional level appear obscure. Little is known about the actual geographic point-of-harvest of snakes, how genetic diversity is partitioned across the species range, how current harvest levels may affect the genetic viability of populations, and whether genetic structure could (or should) be accounted for when managing harvest quotas. As an initial survey, we use mitochondrial sequence data to define the broad-scale geographic structure of genetic diversity across a significant portion of the reticulated python's native range. Preliminary results reveal: (1) prominent phylogenetic structure across populations east and west of Huxley's modification of Wallace's line. Thirty-four haplotypes were apportioned across two geographically distinct groups, estimated to be moderately (5.2%); (2) Philippine, Bornean and Sulawesian populations appear to cluster distinctly; (3) individuals from Ambon Island suggest recent human introduction. Malayopython reticulatus is currently managed as a single taxonomic unit across Southeast Asia yet these initial results may justify special management considerations of the Philippine populations as a phylogenetically distinct unit, that warrants further examination. In Indonesia, genetic structure does not conform tightly to political boundaries and therefore we advocate the precautionary designation and use of Evolutionary Significant Units within Malayopython reticulatus, to inform and guide regional adaptive management plans.
作为东南亚一种重要的经济自然资源,网纹蟒(马来网纹蟒亚种)主要因其珍贵的蛇皮而被从野外捕获,这种蛇皮在奢侈品皮革行业备受青睐。这种被列入《濒危野生动植物种国际贸易公约》附录二的物种的贸易动态十分复杂,国家或地区层面的管理方法似乎并不明确。对于蛇类实际的捕获地理位置、遗传多样性如何在物种分布范围内划分、当前的捕获水平可能如何影响种群的遗传活力,以及在管理捕获配额时是否可以(或应该)考虑遗传结构等问题,人们知之甚少。作为初步调查,我们利用线粒体序列数据来确定网纹蟒原生范围很大一部分地区遗传多样性的广泛地理结构。初步结果显示:(1)在赫胥黎对华莱士线进行修正后的线东西两侧的种群之间存在显著的系统发育结构。34个单倍型被分配到两个地理上不同的群体中,估计分化程度为中等(5.2%);(2)菲律宾、婆罗洲和苏拉威西岛的种群似乎明显聚类;(3)来自安汶岛的个体表明是近期人类引入的。马来网纹蟒目前在东南亚被作为一个单一的分类单元进行管理,但这些初步结果可能证明将菲律宾种群作为一个系统发育上不同的单元进行特殊管理考虑是合理的,这值得进一步研究。在印度尼西亚,遗传结构与政治边界并不紧密相符,因此我们主张在马来网纹蟒中谨慎指定和使用进化显著单元,以指导区域适应性管理计划。