von Thaden Alina, Cocchiararo Berardino, Mueller Sarah Ashley, Reiners Tobias Erik, Reinert Katharina, Tuchscherer Iris, Janke Axel, Nowak Carsten
Conservation Genetics Group Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt Gelnhausen Germany.
Institute of Ecology, Evolution & Diversity Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University, Biologicum Frankfurt am Main Germany.
Ecol Evol. 2021 Dec 3;11(24):17932-17951. doi: 10.1002/ece3.8385. eCollection 2021 Dec.
Like many carnivore species, European wildcats () have suffered severe anthropogenic population declines in the past, resulting in a strong population bottleneck at the beginning of the 20th century. In Germany, the species has managed to survive its near extinction in small isolated areas and is currently recolonizing former habitats owing to legal protection and concerted conservation efforts. Here, we SNP-genotyped and mtDNA-sequenced 56 historical and 650 contemporary samples to assess the impact of massive persecution on genetic diversity, population structure, and hybridization dynamics of wildcats. Spatiotemporal analyses suggest that the presumed postglacial differentiation between two genetically distinct metapopulations in Germany is in fact the result of the anthropogenic bottleneck followed by re-expansion from few secluded refugia. We found that, despite the bottleneck, populations experienced no severe genetic erosion, nor suffered from elevated inbreeding or showed signs of increased hybridization with domestic cats. Our findings have significant implications for current wildcat conservation strategies, as the data analyses show that the two presently recognized wildcat population clusters should be treated as a single conservation unit. Although current populations appear under no imminent threat from genetic factors, fostering connectivity through the implementation of forest corridors will facilitate the preservation of genetic diversity and promote long-term viability. The present study documents how museum collections can be used as essential resource for assessing long-term anthropogenic effects on natural populations, for example, regarding population structure and the delineation of appropriate conservation units, potentially informing todays' species conservation.
与许多食肉动物物种一样,欧洲野猫()在过去因人为因素导致种群数量急剧下降,在20世纪初形成了严重的种群瓶颈。在德国,该物种在一些孤立的小区域中勉强存活下来,未致灭绝,由于法律保护和协同的保护努力,目前正在重新占领以前的栖息地。在此,我们对56个历史样本和650个当代样本进行了单核苷酸多态性基因分型和线粒体DNA测序,以评估大规模迫害对野猫遗传多样性、种群结构和杂交动态的影响。时空分析表明,德国两个基因上不同的集合种群之间假定的冰期后分化实际上是人为瓶颈的结果,随后是从少数隐蔽避难所重新扩张的结果。我们发现,尽管存在瓶颈,种群并未经历严重的遗传侵蚀,也没有遭受近亲繁殖增加的影响,或显示出与家猫杂交增加的迹象。我们的研究结果对当前的野猫保护策略具有重要意义,因为数据分析表明,目前公认的两个野猫种群集群应被视为一个单一的保护单位。虽然目前的种群似乎没有受到遗传因素的紧迫威胁,但通过实施森林走廊来促进连通性将有助于保护遗传多样性并促进长期生存能力。本研究记录了博物馆藏品如何作为评估长期人为因素对自然种群影响的重要资源,例如,关于种群结构和划定适当的保护单位,这可能为当今的物种保护提供参考。