Evaluating the genetic consequences of population subdivision as it unfolds and how to best mitigate them: A rare story about koalas

Author:

Frère C. H.1ORCID,O'Reilly G. D.2,Strickland K.3,Schultz A.4ORCID,Hohwieler K.5,Hanger J.6,de Villiers D.6,Cristescu R.5ORCID,Powell D.5ORCID,Sherwin W.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland Australia

2. The School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Institute of Ecology and Evolution University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

4. Icelandic Museum of Natural History (Náttúruminjasafn Íslands) Reykjavik Iceland

5. School of Science, Technology and Engineering University of the Sunshine Coast Queensland Australia

6. Endeavour Veterinary Ecology Pty Ltd Toorbul Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe genetic consequences of the subdivision of populations are regarded as significant to long‐term evolution, and research has shown that the scale and speed at which this is now occurring is critically reducing the adaptive potential of most species which inhabit human‐impacted landscapes. Here, we provide a rare and, to our knowledge, the first analysis of this process while it is happening and demonstrate a method of evaluating the effect of mitigation measures such as fauna crossings. We did this by using an extensive genetic data set collected from a koala population which was intensely monitored during the construction of linear transport infrastructure which resulted in the subdivision of their population. First, we found that both allelic richness and effective population size decreased through the process of population subdivision. Second, we predicted the extent to which genetic drift could impact genetic diversity over time and showed that after only 10 generations the resulting two subdivided populations could experience between 12% and 69% loss in genetic diversity. Lastly, using forward simulations we estimated that a minimum of eight koalas would need to disperse from each side of the subdivision per generation to maintain genetic connectivity close to zero but that 16 koalas would ensure that both genetic connectivity and diversity remained unchanged. These results have important consequences for the genetic management of species in human‐impacted landscapes by showing which genetic metrics are best to identify immediate loss in genetic diversity and how to evaluate the effectiveness of any mitigation measures.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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