Bottlenecked but long-lived: high genetic diversity retained in white-tailed eagles upon recovery from population decline

Author:

Hailer Frank1,Helander Björn2,Folkestad Alv O3,Ganusevich Sergei A4,Garstad Steinar5,Hauff Peter6,Koren Christian7,Nygård Torgeir8,Volke Veljo9,Vilà Carles1,Ellegren Hans1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Evolutionary Biology, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala UniversityNorbyvägen 18d, 75236 Uppsala, Sweden

2. Contaminant Research Group, Swedish Museum of Natural HistoryBox 50007, 10405 Stockholm, Sweden

3. The Norwegian Sea-Eagle ProjectEiksund, 6065 Ulsteinvik, Norway

4. Field Research Group for the Kola NorthKrasnostudencheskiy pr., 21-45, Moscow 127422, Russia

5. PO Box 10, 7994 Leka, Norway

6. Lindenallé 5, 19073 Neu Wandrum, Germany

7. Hagebyv. 39, 9404 Harstad, Norway

8. Norwegian Institute for Nature ResearchTungasletta 2, 7485 Trondheim, Norway

9. Eagle Club, Vahtra 5, 93813 Kuressaare, Estonia

Abstract

Most of the white-tailed eagle ( Haliaeetus albicilla ) populations in Europe experienced dramatic declines during the twentieth century. However, owing to intense conservation actions and the ban of DDT and other persistent pollutants, populations are currently recovering. We show that despite passing through demographic bottlenecks, white-tailed eagle populations have retained significant levels of genetic diversity. Both genetic and ringing data indicate that migration between populations has not been a major factor for the maintenance of genetic variability. We argue that the long generation time of eagles has acted as an intrinsic buffer against loss of genetic diversity, leading to a shorter effective time of the experienced bottleneck. Notably, conservation actions taken in several small sub-populations have ensured the preservation of a larger proportion of the total genetic diversity than if conservation had focused on the population stronghold in Norway. For conservation programmes targeting other endangered, long-lived species, our results highlight the possibility for local retention of high genetic diversity in isolated remnant populations.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference26 articles.

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2. Bijleveld M. 1974 Birds of prey in Europe. London UK:Macmillan Press.

3. Description and Power Analysis of Two Tests for Detecting Recent Population Bottlenecks From Allele Frequency Data

4. Endangered Greater One-horned Rhinoceros Carry High Levels of Genetic Variation

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