Marjamäki Paula H, Dugdale Hannah L, Dawson Deborah A, McDonald Robbie A, Delahay Richard, Burke Terry, Wilson Alastair J
Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter, Penryn, Cornwall, UK.
NERC Biomolecular Analysis Facility, Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Behav Ecol. 2019 Mar-Apr;30(2):301-312. doi: 10.1093/beheco/ary164. Epub 2019 Jan 14.
Movement of individuals, or their genes, can influence eco-evolutionary processes in structured populations. We have limited understanding of the extent to which spatial behavior varies among groups and individuals within populations. Here, we use genetic pedigree reconstruction in a long-term study of European badgers () to characterize the extent of extra-group paternity, occurring as a consequence of breeding excursions, and to test hypothesized drivers of variation at multiple levels. We jointly estimate parentage and paternity distance (PD; distance between a cub's natal and its father's social group), and test whether population density and sex ratio influence mean annual PD. We also model cub-level PD and extra-group paternity (EGP) to test for variation among social groups and parental individuals. Mean PD varied among years but was not explained by population density or sex ratio. However, cub-level analysis shows strong effects of social group, and parental identities, with some parental individuals being consistently more likely to produce cubs with extra-group partners. Group effects were partially explained by local sex ratio. There was also a strong negative correlation between maternal and paternal social group effects on cub paternity distance, indicating source-sink dynamics. Our analyses of paternity distance and EGP indicate variation in extra-group mating at multiple levels-among years, social groups and individuals. The latter in particular is a phenomenon seldom documented and suggests that gene flow among groups may be disproportionately mediated by a nonrandom subset of adults, emphasizing the importance of the individual in driving eco-evolutionary dynamics.
个体及其基因的移动会影响结构化种群中的生态进化过程。我们对于种群中不同群体和个体之间空间行为的差异程度了解有限。在此,我们在一项针对欧洲獾的长期研究中利用基因谱系重建来描述因繁殖外出导致的群体外父权现象的程度,并在多个层面上检验假设的变异驱动因素。我们联合估计亲子关系和父权距离(PD;幼崽出生地与其父亲社会群体之间的距离),并测试种群密度和性别比例是否会影响年平均PD。我们还对幼崽层面的PD和群体外父权(EGP)进行建模,以检验社会群体和父母个体之间的差异。平均PD在不同年份有所变化,但无法用种群密度或性别比例来解释。然而,幼崽层面的分析显示出社会群体和父母身份的强烈影响,一些父母个体始终更有可能与群体外伴侣生育幼崽。群体效应部分由当地性别比例解释。母系和父系社会群体对幼崽父权距离的影响之间也存在强烈的负相关,表明存在源 - 汇动态。我们对父权距离和EGP的分析表明,在多个层面上——年份、社会群体和个体之间——群体外交配存在差异。尤其是后者这种现象很少有记录,这表明群体间的基因流动可能不成比例地由一部分非随机的成年个体介导,强调了个体在驱动生态进化动态中的重要性。