Zhu Qin, Damba Iderbat, Zhao Qingshan, Yi Kunpeng, Batbayar Nyambayar, Natsagdorj Tseveenmyadag, Davaasuren Batmunkh, Wang Xin, Rozenfeld Sonia, Moriguchi Sachiko, Zhan Aibin, Cao Lei, Fox Anthony D
School of Life Sciences University of Science and Technology of China Hefei China.
State Key Laboratory of Urban and Regional Ecology Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Jun 27;10(14):7006-7020. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6382. eCollection 2020 Jul.
Dispersal affects the spatial distribution and population structure of species. Dispersal is often male-biased in mammals while female-biased in birds, with the notable exception of the Anatidae. In this study, we tested genetic evidence for sex-biased dispersal (SBD) in the Swan Goose , an Asian endemic and IUCN vulnerable species, which has been increasingly restricted to breeding on Mongolian steppe wetlands. We analyzed the genotypes of 278 Swan Geese samples from 14 locations at 14 microsatellite loci. Results from assignment indices, analysis of molecular variance, and five other population descriptors all failed to support significant SBD signals for the Swan Goose at the landscape level. Although overall results showed significantly high relatedness within colonies (suggesting high levels of philopatry in both sexes), local male genetic structure at the 1,050 km distance indicated greater dispersal distance for females from the eastern sector of the breeding range. Hence, local dispersal is likely scale-dependent and female-biased within the eastern breeding range. These findings are intriguing considering the prevailing expectation for there to be female fidelity in most goose species. We suggest that while behavior-related traits may have facilitated the local genetic structure for the Swan Goose, several extrinsic factors, including the decreasing availability of the nesting sites and the severe fragmentation of breeding habitats, could have contributed to the absence of SBD at the landscape level. The long-distance molt migration that is typical of goose species such as the Swan Goose may also have hampered our ability to detect SBD. Hence, we urge further genetic sampling from other areas in summer to extend our results, complemented by field observations to confirm our DNA analysis conclusions about sex-specific dispersal patterns at different spatial scales in this species.
扩散影响物种的空间分布和种群结构。在哺乳动物中,扩散通常以雄性为主导,而在鸟类中则以雌性为主导,鸭科是显著的例外。在本研究中,我们对鸿雁(一种亚洲特有且被世界自然保护联盟列为易危物种,其繁殖地日益局限于蒙古草原湿地)进行了性别偏向扩散(SBD)的遗传证据测试。我们分析了来自14个地点的278份鸿雁样本在14个微卫星位点的基因型。归属指数、分子方差分析以及其他五个种群描述符的结果均未能支持在景观水平上鸿雁存在显著的SBD信号。尽管总体结果显示群体内亲缘关系显著较高(表明两性的留居性都很强),但在1050公里距离处的局部雄性遗传结构表明,来自繁殖范围东部区域的雌性扩散距离更大。因此,局部扩散可能取决于尺度,并且在东部繁殖范围内以雌性为主导。考虑到大多数鹅类物种普遍存在雌性忠诚的预期,这些发现很有趣。我们认为,虽然与行为相关的特征可能促进了鸿雁的局部遗传结构形成,但包括筑巢地点可用性下降和繁殖栖息地严重破碎化在内的几个外在因素,可能导致在景观水平上不存在SBD。鸿雁等鹅类物种典型的长距离换羽迁徙也可能妨碍了我们检测SBD的能力。因此,我们敦促在夏季从其他地区进行进一步的遗传采样以扩展我们的研究结果,并辅以实地观察,以证实我们关于该物种在不同空间尺度上性别特异性扩散模式的DNA分析结论。