LaCava Melanie E F, Gagne Roderick B, Stowell Sierra M Love, Gustafson Kyle D, Buerkle C Alex, Knox Lee, Ernest Holly B
Wildlife Genomics and Disease Ecology Laboratory, Department of Veterinary Sciences, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY, USA.
Program in Ecology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY, USA.
J Mammal. 2020 May 29;101(4):1061-1071. doi: 10.1093/jmammal/gyaa054. eCollection 2020 Aug 31.
Preserving connectivity in the core of a species' range is crucial for long-term persistence. However, a combination of ecological characteristics, social behavior, and landscape features can reduce connectivity among wildlife populations and lead to genetic structure. Pronghorn (), for example, exhibit fluctuating herd dynamics and variable seasonal migration strategies, but GPS tracking studies show that landscape features such as highways impede their movements, leading to conflicting hypotheses about expected levels of genetic structure. Given that pronghorn populations declined significantly in the early 1900s, have only partially recovered, and are experiencing modern threats from landscape modification, conserving connectivity among populations is important for their long-term persistence in North America. To assess the genetic structure and diversity of pronghorn in the core of their range, we genotyped 4,949 genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphisms and 11 microsatellites from 398 individuals throughout the state of Wyoming. We found no evidence of genetic subdivision and minimal evidence of isolation by distance despite a range that spans hundreds of kilometers, multiple mountain ranges, and three interstate highways. In addition, a rare variant analysis using putatively recent mutations found no genetic division between pronghorn on either side of a major highway corridor. Although we found no evidence that barriers to daily and seasonal movements of pronghorn impede gene flow, we suggest periodic monitoring of genetic structure and diversity as a part of management strategies to identify changes in connectivity.
保持物种分布范围核心区域的连通性对于其长期存续至关重要。然而,生态特征、社会行为和景观特征的综合作用会降低野生动物种群之间的连通性,并导致遗传结构的产生。例如,叉角羚表现出波动的兽群动态和多变的季节性迁徙策略,但GPS跟踪研究表明,高速公路等景观特征会阻碍它们的移动,从而引发了关于预期遗传结构水平的相互矛盾的假设。鉴于叉角羚种群在20世纪初大幅减少,仅部分恢复,且正面临来自景观改造的现代威胁,保护种群之间的连通性对于它们在北美的长期存续至关重要。为了评估叉角羚分布范围核心区域的遗传结构和多样性,我们对怀俄明州各地398个个体的4949个全基因组单核苷酸多态性和11个微卫星进行了基因分型。尽管其分布范围跨越数百公里、多个山脉和三条州际公路,但我们没有发现遗传细分的证据,也几乎没有发现距离隔离的证据。此外,使用假定的近期突变进行的罕见变异分析发现,在一条主要公路走廊两侧的叉角羚之间没有遗传分化。虽然我们没有发现证据表明叉角羚日常和季节性移动的障碍会阻碍基因流动,但我们建议定期监测遗传结构和多样性,作为管理策略的一部分,以识别连通性的变化。