Department of Primatology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona.
Am J Primatol. 2018 Sep;80(9):e22902. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22902. Epub 2018 Jul 27.
Habitat fragmentation is a leading threat to global biodiversity. Dispersal plays a key role in gene flow and population viability, but the impact of fragmentation on dispersal patterns remains poorly understood. Among chimpanzees, males typically remain in their natal communities while females often disperse. However, habitat loss and fragmentation may cause severe ecological disruptions, potentially resulting in decreased fitness benefits of male philopatry and limited female dispersal ability. To investigate this issue, we genotyped nearly 900 non-invasively collected chimpanzee fecal samples across a fragmented forest habitat that may function as a corridor between two large continuous forests in Uganda, and used the spatial associations among co-sampled genotypes to attribute a total of 229 individuals to 10 distinct communities, including 9 communities in the corridor habitat and 1 in continuous forest. We then used parentage analyses to infer instances of between-community dispersal. Of the 115 parent-offspring dyads detected with confidence, members of 39% (N = 26) of mother-daughter dyads were found in different communities, while members of 10% (N = 5) of father-son dyads were found in different communities. We also found direct evidence for one dispersal event that occurred during the study period, as a female's sample found first in one community was found multiple times in another community 19 months later. These findings suggest that even in fragmented habitats, chimpanzee males remain in their natal communities while females tend to disperse. Corridor enhancement in unprotected forest fragments could help maintain gene flow in chimpanzees and other species amid anthropogenic pressures.
生境破碎化是全球生物多样性面临的主要威胁之一。扩散在基因流动和种群生存力中起着关键作用,但破碎化对扩散模式的影响仍知之甚少。在黑猩猩中,雄性通常留在其出生地社区,而雌性则经常扩散。然而,生境丧失和破碎化可能会导致严重的生态破坏,从而可能降低雄性恋家的适应性益处和限制雌性的扩散能力。为了研究这个问题,我们对近 900 个非侵入性采集的黑猩猩粪便样本进行了基因分型,这些样本分布在乌干达一个破碎的森林生境中,该生境可能是两个大型连续森林之间的走廊。我们利用共采样基因型之间的空间关联,将总共 229 个个体分配到 10 个不同的社区,包括走廊生境中的 9 个社区和 1 个连续森林社区。然后,我们使用亲子关系分析来推断社区间扩散的实例。在 115 对亲子对中,有 39%(N=26)的母-女对成员在不同的社区中,而 10%(N=5)的父-子对成员在不同的社区中。我们还发现了一个在研究期间发生的直接的扩散事件的证据,因为一个女性的样本首先在一个社区中被发现,19 个月后又在另一个社区中多次被发现。这些发现表明,即使在破碎化的生境中,黑猩猩雄性仍留在其出生地社区,而雌性则倾向于扩散。在未受保护的森林碎片中增加走廊可以帮助维持黑猩猩和其他物种在人为压力下的基因流动。