U.S. Geological Survey Alaska Science Center, Anchorage, Alaska, United States of America.
Fairbanks Fish and Wildlife Field Office, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Fairbanks, Alaska, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Nov 17;12(11):e0188185. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0188185. eCollection 2017.
Subspecies relationships within the peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) have been long debated because of the polytypic nature of melanin-based plumage characteristics used in subspecies designations and potential differentiation of local subpopulations due to philopatry. In North America, understanding the evolutionary relationships among subspecies may have been further complicated by the introduction of captive bred peregrines originating from non-native stock, as part of recovery efforts associated with mid 20th century population declines resulting from organochloride pollution. Alaska hosts all three nominal subspecies of North American peregrine falcons-F. p. tundrius, anatum, and pealei-for which distributions in Alaska are broadly associated with nesting locales within Arctic, boreal, and south coastal maritime habitats, respectively. Unlike elsewhere, populations of peregrine falcon in Alaska were not augmented by captive-bred birds during the late 20th century recovery efforts. Population genetic differentiation analyses of peregrine populations in Alaska, based on sequence data from the mitochondrial DNA control region and fragment data from microsatellite loci, failed to uncover genetic distinction between populations of peregrines occupying Arctic and boreal Alaskan locales. However, the maritime subspecies, pealei, was genetically differentiated from Arctic and boreal populations, and substructured into eastern and western populations. Levels of interpopulational gene flow between anatum and tundrius were generally higher than between pealei and either anatum or tundrius. Estimates based on both marker types revealed gene flow between augmented Canadian populations and unaugmented Alaskan populations. While we make no attempt at formal taxonomic revision, our data suggest that peregrine falcons occupying habitats in Alaska and the North Pacific coast of North America belong to two distinct regional groupings-a coastal grouping (pealei) and a boreal/Arctic grouping (currently anatum and tundrius)-each comprised of discrete populations that are variously intra-regionally connected.
游隼亚种内的关系一直存在争议,因为用于亚种设计的黑色素羽色特征具有多态性,而且由于亲缘关系,当地亚种群可能存在分化。在北美洲,由于 20 世纪中叶有机氯污染导致的种群数量下降,作为与恢复相关的努力的一部分,引入了来自非本地种群的圈养繁殖的游隼,这可能使亚种间的进化关系更加复杂。阿拉斯加拥有北美游隼的所有三个指名亚种——tundrius、anatum 和 pealei——它们在阿拉斯加的分布分别与北极、北方和南海岸海洋栖息地的筑巢地广泛相关。与其他地方不同的是,在 20 世纪后期的恢复努力中,阿拉斯加的游隼种群并没有通过圈养繁殖的鸟类来增加。基于线粒体 DNA 控制区的序列数据和微卫星基因座的片段数据,对阿拉斯加游隼种群的种群遗传分化分析未能发现栖息在北极和北方阿拉斯加的游隼种群之间存在遗传差异。然而,海洋亚种 pealei 与北极和北方种群存在遗传分化,并分为东部和西部种群。anatum 和 tundrius 之间的种群间基因流动水平普遍高于 pealei 与 anatum 或 tundrius 之间的基因流动水平。基于两种标记类型的估计都揭示了加拿大增养殖群和未增养殖群之间的基因流动。虽然我们不试图进行正式的分类修订,但我们的数据表明,栖息在阿拉斯加和北太平洋北美海岸的游隼属于两个不同的区域群体——沿海群体(pealei)和北方/北极群体(目前是 anatum 和 tundrius)——每个群体都由不同的种群组成,这些种群在不同程度上是区域性连接的。