van Rees Charles B, Reed J Michael, Wilson Robert E, Underwood Jared G, Sonsthagen Sarah A
Department of Biology Tufts University Medford Massachusetts.
U. S. Geological Survey Alaska Science Center Anchorage Alaska.
Ecol Evol. 2018 Jul 24;8(16):8328-8343. doi: 10.1002/ece3.4296. eCollection 2018 Aug.
Anthropogenic alterations to landscape structure and composition can have significant impacts on biodiversity, potentially leading to species extinctions. Population-level impacts of landscape change are mediated by animal behaviors, in particular dispersal behavior. Little is known about the dispersal habits of rails (Rallidae) due to their cryptic behavior and tendency to occupy densely vegetated habitats. The effects of landscape structure on the movement behavior of waterbirds in general are poorly studied due to their reputation for having high dispersal abilities. We used a landscape genetic approach to test hypotheses of landscape effects on dispersal behavior of the Hawaiian gallinule (), an endangered subspecies endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. We created a suite of alternative resistance surfaces representing biologically plausible a priori hypotheses of how gallinules might navigate the landscape matrix and ranked these surfaces by their ability to explain observed patterns in genetic distance among 12 populations on the island of O`ahu. We modeled effective distance among wetland locations on all surfaces using both cumulative least-cost-path and resistance-distance approaches and evaluated relative model performance using Mantel tests, a causal modeling approach, and the mixed-model maximum-likelihood population-effects framework. Across all genetic markers, simulation methods, and model comparison metrics, surfaces that treated linear water features like streams, ditches, and canals as corridors for gallinule movement outperformed all other models. This is the first landscape genetic study on the movement behavior of any waterbird species to our knowledge. Our results indicate that lotic water features, including drainage infrastructure previously thought to be of minimal habitat value, contribute to habitat connectivity in this listed subspecies.
人为对景观结构和组成的改变会对生物多样性产生重大影响,有可能导致物种灭绝。景观变化对种群水平的影响是由动物行为介导的,特别是扩散行为。由于秧鸡(秧鸡科)行为隐秘且倾向于占据植被茂密的栖息地,人们对其扩散习性知之甚少。由于水鸟以具有高扩散能力而闻名,总体而言,景观结构对水鸟移动行为的影响研究较少。我们采用景观遗传学方法来检验关于景观对夏威夷黑水鸡(夏威夷群岛特有的濒危亚种)扩散行为影响的假设。我们创建了一组替代抗性表面,代表了关于黑水鸡如何在景观矩阵中导航的生物学上合理的先验假设,并根据它们解释瓦胡岛上12个种群间遗传距离观测模式的能力对这些表面进行排序。我们使用累积最小成本路径和抗性距离方法对所有表面上湿地位置之间的有效距离进行建模,并使用曼特尔检验、因果建模方法和混合模型最大似然种群效应框架评估相对模型性能。在所有遗传标记、模拟方法和模型比较指标中,将溪流、沟渠和运河等线性水体特征视为黑水鸡移动廊道的表面优于所有其他模型。据我们所知,这是对任何水鸟物种移动行为的首次景观遗传学研究。我们的结果表明,包括以前被认为栖息地价值最小的排水基础设施在内的流水特征,对这个被列入名录的亚种的栖息地连通性有贡献。