Conservation implications of high gene flow and lack of pronounced spatial genetic structure in elephants supported by contiguous suitable habitat in north‐western India

Author:

De Rahul1ORCID,Sharma Reeta1ORCID,Singh Sujeet Kumar12ORCID,Rasteiro Rita3ORCID,Bhaskar Ranjana14ORCID,Khan Imran15,Kanagaraj Rajapandian6,Kakati Kashmira7,Nigam Parag1,Williams A. Christy8,Davidar Priya9,Habib Bilal1ORCID,Goyal Surendra Prakash1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Ecology and Conservation Biology Wildlife Institute of India Dehradun India

2. Mammal and Osteology Section Zoological Survey of India Kolkata India

3. School of Biological Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

4. Southern Regional Centre Zoological Survey of India Chennai India

5. Faculty of Medicine University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

6. Department of Ecology French Institute of Pondicherry Pondicherry India

7. Independent Researcher Guwahati India

8. WWF‐Myanmar Yangon Myanmar

9. Sigur Nature Trust Masinagudi India

Abstract

AbstractThe western Terai Arc Landscape (wTAL) in Uttarakhand, India, marks the range limit for the Asian elephant in north‐western India. This region has been impacted by land‐use changes and infrastructure expansion for the last seven decades. To evaluate the impact of habitat deterioration on the population structure of elephants in the region, we characterized their genetic diversity and local genetic structure using mitochondrial (D loop) and nuclear DNA (microsatellites; n = 15) markers. We used tissue samples of 114 elephants from five different sub‐populations, collected between 2005 and 2014. The genetic variation was moderate (HO = 0.49–0.55) compared with other Indian elephant populations. Two mtDNA haplotypes were identified without strong spatial patterns across wTAL. Bayesian individual‐based clustering algorithm identified two genetic clusters (K = 2) with high admixture (50% at Q < 0.7) and no spatial adherence. Though K = 1 was not supported by the Bayesian algorithm, multivariate analysis and sibship patterns did not indicate genetic differentiation. The lack of spatial genetic structuring suggests high levels of gene flow, indicating that this population is still panmictic. This suggests that the life history traits of elephants as well as the ecological features of this landscape influence genetic connectivity. However, ongoing land use changes necessitate regular genetic monitoring in wTAL to identify incipient structuring caused by anthropogenic barriers to movement.

Funder

University Grants Commission

Publisher

Wiley

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