4.3 Article

Fecal genotyping reveals demographic variation in river otters inhabiting a contaminated environment

Journal

JOURNAL OF WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT
Volume 76, Issue 8, Pages 1540-1550

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/jwmg.439

Keywords

British Columbia; capture-mark-recapture; contaminants; fecal genotyping; Lontra canadensis; non-invasive monitoring; population genetics; river otter

Funding

  1. Georgia Basin Action Plan
  2. Strategic Technology Applications of Genomics in the Environment (STAGE) program
  3. Canadian Wildlife Service of Environment Canada
  4. British Columbia Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation
  5. Simon Fraser University
  6. American Society of Mammalogists

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The deposition and accumulation of persistent contaminants into coastal systems can have lingering negative consequences for wildlife populations and their habitats. Using multi-locus genotyping of non-invasively collected feces, we assessed the effects of such pollution on reproduction, survival, genetic variability, and abundance of river otters (Lontra canadensis) along a gradient of urbanindustrial development on southern Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. Genetic analyses indicated a pattern consistent with small-scale structuring, with individuals partitioned into 2 local subpopulationsthose identified in the contaminated harbors of southern Vancouver Island and points west (Colwood/Harbors), and those inhabiting uncontaminated habitat east of the harbors (Oak Bay). Genetic and demographic analyses for the 2 clusters provide strong support for the conclusion that, despite contamination concerns, Colwood/Harbors river otters exhibited acceptable levels of survival and successfully reproduced (i.e., high levels of relatedness, high self-recruitment, and high emigration). However, our data indicate that the Colwood/Harbors area constitutes lower quality habitat supporting lower densities of otters, especially during winter, and excess individuals produced in that region emigrate to other areas. Immigration into Colwood/Harbors, however, seems limited, possibly because of behavioral aversion of non-habituated otters to anthropogenic disturbance associated with the harbors and limited optimal otter habitat. Our findings suggest that the effects of chronic contaminant exposure at the population level may be inadvertently mitigated through the behavioral decisions of individuals to avoid poor quality habitats. We conclude that populations of river otters can persist in and around locally contaminated sites if relatively less disturbed and contaminated habitats remain in the vicinity of the affected areas. (c) 2012 The Wildlife Society.

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