Population genomic structure of a widespread, urban‐dwelling mammal: The eastern grey squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis)

Author:

Fusco Nicole A.1ORCID,Cosentino Bradley J.2ORCID,Gibbs James P.3ORCID,Allen Maximilian L.4ORCID,Blumenfeld Alexander J.1ORCID,Boettner George H.5ORCID,Carlen Elizabeth J.6ORCID,Collins Merri7,Dennison Catherine8ORCID,DiGiacopo Devin9ORCID,Drapeau Picard André‐Philippe10ORCID,Edmonson Jonathan11,Fisher‐Reid M. Caitlin12ORCID,Fyffe Rebecca13,Gallo Travis7ORCID,Grant Alannah14,Harbold William15,Heard Stephen B.16ORCID,Lafferty Diana J. R.17ORCID,Lehtinen Richard M.18ORCID,Marino Shealyn19,McDonald John E.20,Mortelliti Alessio21ORCID,Murray Maureen22,Newman Amy15,Oswald Krista N.23ORCID,Ott‐Conn Caitlin24ORCID,Richardson Jonathan L.25ORCID,Rimbach Rebecca26,Salaman Paul27,Steele Michael19,Stothart Mason R.28ORCID,Urban Mark C.29ORCID,Vandegrift Kurt30ORCID,Vanek John P.31ORCID,Vanderluit Sean N.32,Vezina Lucie16ORCID,Caccone Adalgisa1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

2. Department of Biology Hobart and William Smith Colleges Geneva New York USA

3. Department of Environmental Biology State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry Syracuse New York USA

4. Illinois Natural History Survey, Prairie Research Institute University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Champaign Illinois USA

5. Department of Environmental Conservation University of Massachusetts‐Amherst Amherst Massachusetts USA

6. Department of Biology Washington University‐St. Louis Campus St. Louis Missouri USA

7. Department of Environmental Science and Technology University of Maryland College Park Maryland USA

8. Ohio Division of Wildlife Columbus Ohio USA

9. Yreka Fish and Wildlife Office U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Yreka CA USA

10. Insectarium de Montréal/Espace pour la vie Montréal Quebec Canada

11. Sonderegger Science Center Edgewood College Madison Wisconsin USA

12. Department of Biological Sciences Bridgewater State University Bridgewater Massachusetts USA

13. Landmark Pest Management ABC Humane Wildlife Control & Prevention Inc. Arlington Heights Illinois USA

14. Department of Integrative Biology, College of Biological Sciences University of Guelph Guelph Ontario Canada

15. Maryland Department of Natural Resources Monitoring and Non‐Tidal Assessment Division Annapolis Maryland USA

16. Department of Biology University of New Brunswick Fredericton New Brunswick Canada

17. Department of Biology Northern Michigan University Marqeutte Michigan USA

18. Department of Biology The College of Wooster Wooster Ohio USA

19. Department of Biology Wilkes University Wilkes‐Barre Pennsylvania USA

20. Department of Environmental Science Westfield State University Westfield Massachusetts USA

21. Department of Life Sciences University of Trieste Trieste TS Italy

22. Department of Conservation and Science Lincoln Park Zoo Chicago Illinois USA

23. Mitrani Department of Desert Ecology Ben‐Gurion University of the Negev Midreshet Ben‐Gurion Israel

24. Michigan Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Disease Laboratory – Wildlife Division Naubinway Michigan USA

25. Department of Biology University of Richmond Richmond Virginia USA

26. Department of Behavioural Biology University of Münster Münster Germany

27. Galapagos Conservancy Washington District of Columbia USA

28. Department of Ecosystem and Public Health University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

29. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Center of Biological Risk University of Connecticut Storrs Connecticut USA

30. Department of Biology, Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics The Pennsylvania State University State College Pennsylvania USA

31. New York Natural Heritage Program Albany New York USA

32. Department of Biology Queens University Kingston Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractUrbanization is a persistent and widespread driver of global environmental change, potentially shaping evolutionary processes due to genetic drift and reduced gene flow in cities induced by habitat fragmentation and small population sizes. We tested this prediction for the eastern grey squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis), a common and conspicuous forest‐dwelling rodent, by obtaining 44K SNPs using reduced representation sequencing (ddRAD) for 403 individuals sampled across the species' native range in eastern North America. We observed moderate levels of genetic diversity, low levels of inbreeding, and only a modest signal of isolation‐by‐distance. Clustering and migration analyses show that estimated levels of migration and genetic connectivity were higher than expected across cities and forested areas, specifically within the eastern portion of the species' range dominated by urbanization, and genetic connectivity was less than expected within the western range where the landscape is fragmented by agriculture. Landscape genetic methods revealed greater gene flow among individual squirrels in forested regions, which likely provide abundant food and shelter for squirrels. Although gene flow appears to be higher in areas with more tree cover, only slight discontinuities in gene flow suggest eastern grey squirrels have maintained connected populations across urban areas in all but the most heavily fragmented agricultural landscapes. Our results suggest urbanization shapes biological evolution in wildlife species depending strongly on the composition and habitability of the landscape matrix surrounding urban areas.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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