Department of Biosciences, Metapopulation Research Centre, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
J Anim Ecol. 2019 Aug;88(8):1202-1214. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13011. Epub 2019 Jun 26.
Inbreeding is common in nature, and many laboratory studies have documented that inbreeding depression can reduce the fitness of individuals. Demonstrating the consequences of inbreeding depression on the growth and persistence of populations is more challenging because populations are often regulated by density- or frequency-dependent selection and influenced by demographic and environmental stochasticity. A few empirical studies have shown that inbreeding depression can increase extinction risk of local populations. The importance of inbreeding depression at the metapopulation level has been conjectured based on population-level studies but has not been evaluated. We quantified the impact of inbreeding depression affecting the fitness of individuals on metapopulation persistence in heterogeneous habitat networks of different sizes and habitat configuration in a context of natural butterfly metapopulations. We developed a spatial individual-based simulation model of metapopulations with explicit genetics. We used Approximate Bayesian Computation to fit the model to extensive demographic, genetic and life-history data available for the well-studied Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia) metapopulations in the Åland islands in SW Finland. We compared 18 semi-independent habitat networks differing in size and fragmentation. The results show that inbreeding is more frequent in small habitat networks, and consequently, inbreeding depression elevates extinction risks in small metapopulations. Metapopulation persistence and neutral genetic diversity maintained in the metapopulations increase with the total habitat amount in and mean patch size of habitat networks. Dispersal and mating behaviour interact with landscape structure to determine how likely it is to encounter kin while looking for mates. Inbreeding depression can decrease the viability of small metapopulations even when they are strongly influenced by stochastic extinction-colonization dynamics and density-dependent selection. The findings from this study support that genetic factors, in addition to demographic factors, can contribute to extinctions of small local populations and also of metapopulations.
近亲繁殖在自然界中很常见,许多实验室研究已经证明,近亲繁殖会降低个体的适应性。然而,证明近亲繁殖对种群的生长和持续存在的影响更加具有挑战性,因为种群通常受到密度或频率依赖选择的调节,并且受到人口统计和环境随机性的影响。少数实证研究表明,近亲繁殖会增加局部种群灭绝的风险。基于种群水平的研究,推测了近亲繁殖对物种灭绝的重要性,但尚未进行评估。我们在自然蝴蝶物种中,在不同大小和生境配置的异质生境网络中,量化了影响个体适应性的近亲繁殖对物种灭绝的影响。我们开发了一个具有明确遗传信息的基于空间个体的物种灭绝模拟模型。我们使用近似贝叶斯计算方法,根据广泛的人口统计、遗传和生活史数据,拟合了模型,这些数据可用于研究在芬兰西南部的Åland 群岛上的格氏豹纹蝶(Melitaea cinxia)物种灭绝的情况。我们比较了 18 个半独立的生境网络,这些网络在大小和碎片化方面存在差异。结果表明,近亲繁殖在小的生境网络中更为常见,因此,近亲繁殖会增加小的物种灭绝的风险。物种灭绝的持续性和中性遗传多样性在物种灭绝中保持不变,随着生境网络中的总生境数量和平均斑块大小的增加而增加。扩散和交配行为与景观结构相互作用,决定了在寻找配偶时遇到亲缘的可能性。即使小的物种灭绝受到随机灭绝-定居动态和密度依赖选择的强烈影响,近亲繁殖也会降低小物种灭绝的生存能力。这项研究的结果表明,遗传因素除了人口统计因素外,还可能导致小局部种群和物种灭绝的灭绝。