Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, Ciudad de México, México.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
PLoS One. 2018 Aug 15;13(8):e0202010. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202010. eCollection 2018.
Amphibians are the vertebrate group with the highest number of species threatened with extinction, and habitat loss and fragmentation are considered to be among the leading causes of their declines and extinctions. Little is known of the population biology of amphibian species inhabiting montane forests in Central and West Africa, where anthropogenic activities such as farming and cattle raising are major threats to native biodiversity. We used Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphisms (AFLPs) to assess the population genetic structure of two poorly known species, Cardioglossa schioetzi and Leptodactylodon bicolor (both in the Arthroleptidae), in and around Ngel Nyaki Forest Reserve on the Mambilla Plateau in eastern Nigeria. The landscape comprises continuous forest on steep slopes and small riparian forest fragments in a grassland matrix. While increased fragmentation is well documented for these and other forests in the mountains of Cameroon and Nigeria over the past century, there are no previous assessments of the impact of forest fragmentation on montane amphibian populations in this region. Our estimates of genetic diversity are similar across populations within each species with levels of heterozygosity values consistent with local population declines. Except for a pair of populations (C. schioetzi) we did not observe genetic differentiation between forest and riparian forest fragment populations, nor across sites within continuous forest (L. bicolor). Our results demonstrate recent gene flow between forest fragments and the adjacent protected forests and suggest that small forest corridors connecting these may lessen the genetic consequences of at least 30 years of intense and severe fragmentation in Ngel Nyaki.
两栖动物是物种受灭绝威胁最多的脊椎动物群体,而栖息地的丧失和破碎化被认为是其减少和灭绝的主要原因之一。人们对栖息在中非和西非山地森林中的两栖物种的种群生物学了解甚少,在这些地区,农业和养牛等人为活动是对本地生物多样性的主要威胁。我们使用扩增片段长度多态性 (AFLPs) 来评估两种知之甚少的物种——Cardioglossa schioetzi 和 Leptodactylodon bicolor(均属于 Arthroleptidae 科)——在尼日利亚东部曼比拉高原 Ngel Nyaki 森林保护区及其周围的种群遗传结构。该景观由陡峭山坡上的连续森林和草原基质中的小型河岸森林片段组成。虽然过去一个世纪来,喀麦隆和尼日利亚山区的这些森林以及其他森林的破碎化程度已经得到很好的记录,但该地区高山两栖动物种群受森林破碎化影响的情况以前并没有得到评估。我们对每个物种内种群遗传多样性的估计在不同种群之间是相似的,杂合度水平与当地种群减少一致。除了一对种群(C. schioetzi)外,我们没有观察到森林和河岸森林片段种群之间的遗传分化,也没有观察到连续森林内各地点之间的遗传分化(L. bicolor)。我们的研究结果表明,森林片段与相邻保护区之间存在近期基因流,并且连接这些森林片段的小森林走廊可能减轻了至少 30 年来 Ngel Nyaki 地区强烈和严重破碎化的遗传后果。