4.7 Article

Environmental resistance and habitat quality influence dispersal of the saltwater crocodile

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages 1076-1092

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16310

Keywords

Crocodylus porosus; dispersal; genetics; habitat; movement; population; resistance

Funding

  1. Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Northern Territory Government
  2. ACT Herpetological Association
  3. IUCN-SSC Crocodile Specialist Group Student Research Assistance Scheme [15/5]
  4. Australian National University
  5. National Geographic Society [51-16]
  6. Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment [HWRE2016R2027NEW]
  7. Charles Darwin University

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This study used landscape genetics approaches to examine the dispersal patterns of saltwater crocodiles and found that both environmental resistance and characteristics of breeding habitat influenced dispersal events. Competition for habitat and environmental resistance to movement were identified as important factors affecting emigration and settlement choices. The study also revealed that a significant proportion of crocodiles migrated from populations outside their sampling locations, with a range of travel distances observed.
Landscape genetics commonly focuses on the effects of environmental resistance on animal dispersal patterns, but there is an emerging focus on testing environmental effects on emigration and settlement choices. In this study, we used landscape genetics approaches to quantify dispersal patterns in the world's largest crocodilian, the saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus), and demonstrated environmental influences on three processes that comprise dispersal: emigration, movement and settlement. We found that both environmental resistance and properties of the source and destination catchments (proportion of breeding habitat) were important factors influencing observed dispersal events. Our habitat quality variables related to hypotheses about resource competition and represented the ratio of breeding habitat (which limits carrying capacity), suggesting that competition for habitat influences emigration and settlement choices, together with the strong effect of environmental resistance to movement (where high-quality habitat was associated with greatest environmental permeability). Approximately 42% of crocodiles were migrants from populations other than their sampling locations and some outstandingly productive populations had a much higher proportion of emigration rather than immigration. The distance most commonly travelled between source and destination was 150-200 km although a few travelled much longer distances, up to 600-700 km. Given the extensive dispersal range, individual catchments or hydrographic regions that combine two or three adjacent catchments are an appropriate scale for population management.

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