Chafin Tyler K, Zbinden Zachery D, Douglas Marlis R, Martin Bradley T, Middaugh Christopher R, Gray M Cory, Ballard Jennifer R, Douglas Michael E
Department of Biological Sciences University of Arkansas Fayetteville AR USA.
Present address: Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Colorado Boulder CO USA.
Evol Appl. 2021 May 4;14(6):1673-1689. doi: 10.1111/eva.13233. eCollection 2021 Jun.
Approximately 100 years ago, unregulated harvest nearly eliminated white-tailed deer () from eastern North America, which subsequently served to catalyze wildlife management as a national priority. An extensive stock-replenishment effort soon followed, with deer broadly translocated among states as a means of re-establishment. However, an unintended consequence was that natural patterns of gene flow became obscured and pretranslocation signatures of population structure were replaced. We applied cutting-edge molecular and biogeographic tools to disentangle genetic signatures of historical management from those reflecting spatially heterogeneous dispersal by evaluating 35,099 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) derived via reduced-representation genomic sequencing from 1143 deer sampled statewide in Arkansas. We then employed Simpson's diversity index to summarize ancestry assignments and visualize spatial genetic transitions. Using sub-sampled transects across these transitions, we tested clinal patterns across loci against theoretical expectations of their response under scenarios of re-colonization and restricted dispersal. Two salient results emerged: (A) Genetic signatures from historic translocations are demonstrably apparent; and (B) Geographic filters (major rivers; urban centers; highways) now act as inflection points for the distribution of this contemporary ancestry. These results yielded a statewide assessment of contemporary population structure in deer as driven by historic translocations as well as ongoing processes. In addition, the analytical framework employed herein to effectively decipher extant/historic drivers of deer distribution in Arkansas is also applicable for other biodiversity elements with similarly complex demographic histories.
大约100年前,无节制的捕猎几乎使北美东部的白尾鹿灭绝,这随后促使野生动物管理成为国家优先事项。随后很快展开了大规模的种群补充工作,鹿被广泛地在各州间转移以重新建立种群。然而,一个意外的后果是基因流动的自然模式变得模糊,种群结构的迁移前特征被取代。我们应用前沿的分子和生物地理工具,通过评估从阿肯色州全州范围内采集的1143只鹿的简化基因组测序获得的35,099个单核苷酸多态性(SNP),来区分历史管理的遗传特征与反映空间异质扩散的遗传特征。然后我们使用辛普森多样性指数来总结祖先归属并可视化空间遗传转变。利用这些转变过程中的子采样样带,我们根据重新定殖和受限扩散情况下各基因座的理论预期,测试了沿梯度变化的模式。出现了两个显著结果:(A)历史迁移的遗传特征明显可见;(B)地理屏障(主要河流、城市中心、高速公路)现在成为这种当代祖先分布的转折点。这些结果对由历史迁移以及当前过程驱动的鹿的当代种群结构进行了全州范围的评估。此外,本文所采用的有效解读阿肯色州鹿分布的现存/历史驱动因素的分析框架,也适用于其他具有类似复杂种群历史的生物多样性元素。