Genetic Monitoring of Grey Wolves in Latvia Shows Adverse Reproductive and Social Consequences of Hunting

Author:

Žunna Agrita1ORCID,Ruņģis Dainis Edgars1ORCID,Ozoliņš Jānis1ORCID,Stepanova Alda1,Done Gundega1

Affiliation:

1. Latvian State Forest Research Institute Silava, Rīgas Str. 111, LV-2169 Salaspils, Latvia

Abstract

Nowadays, genetic research methods play an important role in animal population studies. Since 2009, genetic material from Latvian wolf specimens obtained through hunting has been systematically gathered. This study, spanning until 2021, scrutinizes the consequences of regulated wolf hunting on population genetic metrics, kinship dynamics, and social organization. We employed 16 autosomal microsatellites to investigate relationships between full siblings and parent–offspring pairs. Our analysis encompassed expected and observed heterozygosity, inbreeding coefficients, allelic diversity, genetic distance and differentiation, mean pairwise relatedness, and the number of migrants per generation. The Latvian wolf population demonstrated robust genetic diversity with minimal inbreeding, maintaining stable allelic diversity and high heterozygosity over time and it is not fragmented. Our findings reveal the persistence of conventional wolf pack structures and enduring kinship groups. However, the study also underscores the adverse effects of intensified hunting pressure, leading to breeder loss, pack disruption, territorial displacement, and the premature dispersal of juvenile wolves.

Funder

European Social Fund

Game Management Development Fund of the Ministry of Agriculture of the Republic of Latvia

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference83 articles.

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5. Gittleman, J.L., Funk, S.M., Macdonald, D.W., and Wayne, R.K. (2001). Carnivore Conservation, Cambridge University Press.

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