Geographic isolation reduces genetic diversity of a wide‐ranging terrestrial vertebrate, Canis lupus

Author:

Frévol Salomé A.12ORCID,MacNulty Daniel R.2,Anderson Morgan3,Carmichael Lindsey E.4,Cluff H. Dean5ORCID,Mech L. David6,Musiani Marco7

Affiliation:

1. Université Paris‐Saclay Orsay France

2. Department of Wildland Resources and Ecology Center Utah State University Logan Utah USA

3. British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development Prince George British Columbia Canada

4. Department of Biological Sciences University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

5. Environment and Natural Resources Government of the Northwest Territories North Slave Region Northwest Territories Canada

6. U.S. Geological Survey Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center Jamestown North Dakota USA

7. Dipartimento di Scienze Biologiche, Geologiche e Ambientali (BiGeA) Università di Bologna Bologna Italy

Abstract

AbstractGenetic diversity is theorized to decrease in populations closer to a species' range edge, where habitat may be suboptimal. Generalist species capable of long‐range dispersal may maintain sufficient gene flow to counteract this, though the presence of significant barriers to dispersal (e.g., large water bodies, human‐dominated landscapes) may still lead to, and exacerbate, the edge effect. We used microsatellite data for 2421 gray wolves (Canis lupus) from 24 subpopulations (groups) to model how allelic richness and expected heterozygosity varied with mainland–island position and two measures of range edge (latitude and distance from range center) across >7.3 million km2 of northern North America. We expected low genetic diversity both at high latitudes, due to harsh environmental conditions, and on islands, but no change in diversity with distance to the range center due to the species' exceptional dispersal ability and favorable conditions in far eastern and western habitats. We found that allelic richness and expected heterozygosity of island groups were measurably less than that of mainland groups, and that these differences increased with the island's distance to the species' range center in the study area. Our results demonstrate how multiple axes of geographic isolation (distance from range center and island habitation) can act synergistically to erode the genetic diversity of wide‐ranging terrestrial vertebrate populations despite the counteracting influence of long‐range dispersal ability. These findings emphasize how geographic isolation is a potential threat to the genetic diversity and viability of terrestrial vertebrate populations even among species capable of long‐range dispersal.

Funder

British Broadcasting Corporation

Government of Nunavut

National Geographic Society

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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