Mammalian Ecology and Conservation Unit, Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, University of California, Davis, 1 Shields Avenue, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
Cascades Carnivore Project, 309 Oak Street, Suite 201, Hood River, OR, 97301, USA.
Heredity (Edinb). 2022 Aug;129(2):123-136. doi: 10.1038/s41437-022-00522-4. Epub 2022 Mar 21.
As anthropogenic disturbances continue to drive habitat loss and range contractions, the maintenance of evolutionary processes will increasingly require targeting measures to the population level, even for common and widespread species. Doing so requires detailed knowledge of population genetic structure, both to identify populations of conservation need and value, as well as to evaluate suitability of potential donor populations. We conducted a range-wide analysis of the genetic structure of red foxes in the contiguous western U.S., including a federally endangered distinct population segment of the Sierra Nevada subspecies, with the objectives of contextualizing field observations of relative scarcity in the Pacific mountains and increasing abundance in the cold desert basins of the Intermountain West. Using 31 autosomal microsatellites, along with mitochondrial and Y-chromosome markers, we found that populations of the Pacific mountains were isolated from one another and genetically depauperate (e.g., estimated Ne range = 3-9). In contrast, red foxes in the Intermountain regions showed relatively high connectivity and genetic diversity. Although most Intermountain red foxes carried indigenous western matrilines (78%) and patrilines (85%), the presence of nonindigenous haplotypes at lower elevations indicated admixture with fur-farm foxes and possibly expanding midcontinent populations as well. Our findings suggest that some Pacific mountain populations could likely benefit from increased connectivity (i.e., genetic rescue) but that nonnative admixture makes expanding populations in the Intermountain basins a non-ideal source. However, our results also suggest contact between Pacific mountain and Intermountain basin populations is likely to increase regardless, warranting consideration of risks and benefits of proactive measures to mitigate against unwanted effects of Intermountain gene flow.
随着人为干扰继续导致栖息地丧失和范围收缩,维持进化过程将越来越需要将措施针对种群水平,即使是对于常见和广泛分布的物种也是如此。要做到这一点,需要详细了解种群遗传结构,不仅要确定需要保护的种群,还要评估潜在供体种群的适宜性。我们对美国西部连续的红狐种群进行了全范围的遗传结构分析,包括内华达山脉亚种的一个联邦濒危特有种群,目的是将太平洋山脉地区相对稀少的实地观察结果置于背景之中,并增加山间西部寒冷沙漠流域的丰富度。我们使用 31 个常染色体微卫星,以及线粒体和 Y 染色体标记,发现太平洋山脉的种群彼此隔离,遗传贫瘠(例如,估计 Ne 范围为 3-9)。相比之下,山间地区的红狐具有相对较高的连通性和遗传多样性。尽管大多数山间红狐携带本土西部母系(78%)和父系(85%),但在较低海拔处存在非本土单倍型表明与皮毛养殖场狐狸以及可能扩张的中大陆种群混合。我们的研究结果表明,一些太平洋山脉种群可能受益于增加的连通性(即遗传拯救),但非本土混合使得在山间流域扩张种群成为不理想的来源。然而,我们的研究结果还表明,无论如何,太平洋山脉和山间流域种群之间的接触都可能增加,因此需要考虑主动措施的风险和收益,以减轻山间基因流的不良影响。