Kazahari N, Inoue E, Nakagawa N, Kawamoto Y, Uno T, Inoue-Murayama M
Wildlife Research Center, Kyoto University, 2-24 Tanaka-Sekiden-cho, Sakyo, Kyoto, 606-8203, Japan.
Field Science Center for Northern Biosphere, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan.
Primates. 2023 Mar;64(2):239-246. doi: 10.1007/s10329-023-01050-3. Epub 2023 Feb 20.
Populations of Japanese macaques were significantly reduced in most areas from the 1900s to the 1960s and then recovered mainly in the northeastern part of Honshu. A drastic reduction in population size reduces genetic variability through a bottleneck effect. Demographic expansion after the reduction that accumulates new mutations can reduce the bottleneck effects or drive the recovery of genetic variability. We examined the genetic status of a small island population (Kinkazan Island) and a larger mainland population (southern Tohoku) of Japanese macaques that experienced recent demographic bottlenecks and recovery using eight microsatellite loci. The two populations were significantly genetically different from each other. The Kinkazan population exhibited lower genetic variability, remarkable evidence of bottleneck (i.e., significant heterozygosity excess and lower frequency of rare alleles), and a considerably smaller effective population size based on genetic data than based on the current census size. These results indicate that the genetic status has not completely recovered from the demographic bottleneck despite a full recovery in census size on Kinkazan Island. New mutations might rarely have accumulated because of the small carrying capacity of the island. Therefore, the genetic variability of the population would have been restrained by the severe bottleneck size, small carrying capacity, and long-term isolation. On the other hand, the bottleneck effect seems to be limited in the southern Tohoku population considering higher genetic variability, non-significant heterozygosity excess in many mutation conditions, and the highest frequency of rare alleles.
从20世纪初到20世纪60年代,日本猕猴的种群数量在大多数地区都显著减少,随后主要在本州岛东北部恢复。种群数量的急剧减少通过瓶颈效应降低了遗传变异性。减少后积累新突变的种群扩张可以减少瓶颈效应或推动遗传变异性的恢复。我们使用八个微卫星位点研究了经历近期种群瓶颈和恢复的日本猕猴的一个小岛屿种群(金毛山岛)和一个较大的大陆种群(东北南部)的遗传状况。这两个种群在遗传上彼此有显著差异。金毛山种群表现出较低的遗传变异性、明显的瓶颈证据(即显著的杂合子过剩和稀有等位基因频率较低),并且基于遗传数据的有效种群大小比基于当前普查大小的有效种群大小小得多。这些结果表明,尽管金毛山岛的普查种群数量已完全恢复,但其遗传状况尚未从种群瓶颈中完全恢复。由于该岛的承载能力较小,新突变可能很少积累。因此,该种群的遗传变异性可能受到严重瓶颈规模、小承载能力和长期隔离的限制。另一方面,考虑到较高的遗传变异性、在许多突变条件下杂合子过剩不显著以及稀有等位基因的最高频率,东北南部种群的瓶颈效应似乎有限。