Geary Brock, Longest Susan M, Ottewell Kym, Lantz Samantha M, Walter Scott T, Karubian Jordan, Leberg Paul L
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States of America.
Department of Biology, University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Lafayette, Louisiana, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Oct 4;12(10):e0185309. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0185309. eCollection 2017.
Environmental disturbances, both natural and anthropogenic, have the capacity to substantially impact animal behavior and abundance, which can in turn influence patterns of genetic diversity and gene flow. However, little empirical information is available on the nature and degree of such changes due to the relative rarity of longitudinal genetic sampling of wild populations at appropriate intervals. Addressing this knowledge gap is therefore of interest to evolutionary biologists, policy makers, and managers. In the past half century, populations of the brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) in the southeastern United States have been exposed to regional extirpations, translocations, colony losses, and oil spills, but potential impacts on genetic diversity and population structure remain unknown. To investigate the cumulative impacts of recent disturbances and management actions, we analyzed seven microsatellite loci using genetic samples collected from 540 nestlings across twelve pelican colonies from two time periods, corresponding to before (n = 305) and after (n = 235) the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Pre-2010 populations in Texas were significantly differentiated from Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida populations to the east, with reintroduced populations in southeastern Louisiana having less genetic diversity than sites in Texas, consistent with a recent bottleneck. In contrast, there was no evidence of a geographic component to genetic structure among colonies sampled after the spill, consistent with increased dispersal among sites following the event. This pattern may be associated with reduced philopatry in response to colony abandonment in the areas most heavily impacted by the Deepwater Horizon event, though other factors (e.g., rehabilitation and translocation of oiled birds or colony loss due to erosion and tropical storms) were likely also involved. Future monitoring is necessary to determine if bottlenecks and loss of genetic variation are associated with the oil spill over time, and is recommended for other systems in which disturbance effects may be inferred via repeated genetic sampling.
自然和人为的环境干扰都有可能对动物行为和数量产生重大影响,进而影响遗传多样性和基因流动模式。然而,由于以适当间隔对野生种群进行纵向基因采样相对较少,关于此类变化的性质和程度的实证信息很少。因此,解决这一知识空白是进化生物学家、政策制定者和管理者所感兴趣的。在过去的半个世纪里,美国东南部的褐鹈鹕(Pelecanus occidentalis)种群经历了区域灭绝、迁移、栖息地丧失和石油泄漏,但对遗传多样性和种群结构的潜在影响仍然未知。为了调查近期干扰和管理行动的累积影响,我们使用从两个时间段的12个鹈鹕栖息地收集的540只雏鸟的基因样本,分析了7个微卫星位点,这两个时间段分别对应2010年深水地平线石油泄漏之前(n = 305)和之后(n = 235)。2010年之前,得克萨斯州的种群与东部的路易斯安那州、阿拉巴马州和佛罗里达州的种群有显著差异,路易斯安那州东南部重新引入的种群的遗传多样性低于得克萨斯州的种群,这与近期的瓶颈效应一致。相比之下,在泄漏后采样的栖息地中,没有证据表明遗传结构存在地理成分,这与事件发生后各地点之间扩散增加一致。这种模式可能与受深水地平线事件影响最严重地区的栖息地被遗弃导致归巢性降低有关,不过其他因素(如油污鸟类的康复和迁移或因侵蚀和热带风暴导致的栖息地丧失)可能也起了作用。未来有必要进行监测,以确定瓶颈效应和遗传变异的丧失是否会随着时间的推移与石油泄漏相关,并建议对其他可能通过重复基因采样推断干扰效应的系统进行监测。