Jahner Joshua P, Matocq Marjorie D, Malaney Jason L, Cox Mike, Wolff Peregrine, Gritts Mitchell A, Parchman Thomas L
Department of Biology University of Nevada Reno Nevada.
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science, and Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology University of Nevada Reno Nevada.
Evol Appl. 2018 Oct 16;12(2):198-213. doi: 10.1111/eva.12708. eCollection 2019 Feb.
Conservation biologists have increasingly used translocations to mitigate population declines and restore locally extirpated populations. Genetic data can guide the selection of source populations for translocations and help evaluate restoration success. Bighorn sheep () are a managed big game species that suffered widespread population extirpations across western North America throughout the early 1900s. Subsequent translocation programs have successfully re-established many formally extirpated bighorn herds, but most of these programs pre-date genetically informed management practices. The state of Nevada presents a particularly well-documented case of decline followed by restoration of extirpated herds. Desert bighorn sheep () populations declined to less than 3,000 individuals restricted to remnant herds in the Mojave Desert and a few locations in the Great Basin Desert. Beginning in 1968, the Nevada Department of Wildlife translocated ~2,000 individuals from remnant populations to restore previously extirpated areas, possibly establishing herds with mixed ancestries. Here, we examined genetic diversity and structure among remnant herds and the genetic consequences of translocation from these herds using a genotyping-by-sequencing approach to genotype 17,095 loci in 303 desert bighorn sheep. We found a signal of population genetic structure among remnant Mojave Desert populations, even across geographically proximate mountain ranges. Further, we found evidence of a genetically distinct, potential relict herd from a previously hypothesized Great Basin lineage of desert bighorn sheep. The genetic structure of source herds was clearly reflected in translocated populations. In most cases, herds retained genetic evidence of multiple translocation events and subsequent admixture when founded from multiple remnant source herds. Our results add to a growing literature on how population genomic data can be used to guide and monitor restoration programs.
保护生物学家越来越多地利用物种迁移来缓解种群数量下降,并恢复当地灭绝的种群。遗传数据可以指导物种迁移源种群的选择,并有助于评估恢复的成功率。大角羊(学名:Ovis canadensis)是一种受管理的大型猎物物种,在20世纪初,其种群数量在北美西部广泛灭绝。随后的物种迁移计划成功地重新建立了许多曾经灭绝的大角羊群,但这些计划大多早于基于遗传信息的管理实践。内华达州提供了一个记录特别详实的案例,先是种群数量下降,随后是灭绝种群的恢复。沙漠大角羊(学名:Ovis canadensis nelsoni)的种群数量减少到不足3000只,仅局限于莫哈韦沙漠的残余种群以及大盆地沙漠的一些地点。从1968年开始,内华达州野生动物部门从残余种群中迁移了约2000只个体,以恢复先前灭绝的地区,这可能形成了具有混合血统的种群。在这里,我们使用测序基因分型方法对303只沙漠大角羊的170,95个基因座进行基因分型,研究了残余种群之间的遗传多样性和结构,以及从这些种群进行物种迁移的遗传后果。我们在莫哈韦沙漠的残余种群中发现了种群遗传结构的信号,即使是在地理上相邻的山脉之间。此外,我们发现了一个遗传上独特的、可能是来自先前假设的大盆地沙漠大角羊谱系的潜在残余种群的证据。源种群的遗传结构在迁移种群中得到了明显体现。在大多数情况下,当从多个残余源种群建立种群时,这些种群保留了多次迁移事件和随后混合的遗传证据。我们的研究结果进一步丰富了关于如何利用种群基因组数据来指导和监测恢复计划的文献。