4.5 Article

Population genetic structure of wolves in the northwestern Dinaric-Balkan region

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 24, Pages 18492-18504

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8444

Keywords

Balkan Peninsula; Canis lupus; Dinaric Mountains; effective population size; microsatellites; population structure

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia
  2. Rufford Foundation
  3. Ministry for Environment of the Republic of Croatia
  4. Bernd Thies-Stiftung
  5. European Comission-LIFE SLOWOLF [LIFE08 NAT/SLO/000244]
  6. EuroNatur Stiftung
  7. Ministry of the Environment and Spatial Planning of the Republic of Slovenia

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The Balkan Peninsula and the Dinaric Mountains are home to a diverse wolf population, with a west-east substructure observed among wolves in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Serbia. The study identified three genetic clusters in the region, providing a foundation for future genomic research to further understand the population structure and evolutionary history of wolves and other taxa. These findings are crucial for conservation planning and habitat protection efforts for wolves in the European range.
The Balkan Peninsula and the Dinaric Mountains possess extraordinary biodiversity and support one of the largest and most diverse wolf (Canis lupus) populations in Europe. Results obtained with diverse genetic markers show west-east substructure, also seen in various other species, despite the absence of obvious barriers to movement. However, the spatial extent of the genetic clusters remains unresolved, and our aim was to combine fine-scale sampling with population and spatial genetic analyses to improve resolution of wolf genetic clusters. We analyzed 16 autosomal microsatellites from 255 wolves sampled in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BIH), and Serbia and documented three genetic clusters. These comprised (1) Slovenia and the regions of Gorski kotar and Lika in Croatia, (2) the region of Dalmatia in southern Croatia and BIH, and (3) Serbia. When we mapped the clusters geographically, we observed west-east genetic structure across the study area, together with some specific structure in BIH-Dalmatia. We observed that cluster 1 had a smaller effective population size, consistent with earlier reports of population recovery since the 1980s. Our results provide foundation for future genomic studies that would further resolve the observed west-east population structure and its evolutionary history in wolves and other taxa in the region and identify focal areas for habitat conservation. They also have immediate importance for conservation planning for the wolves in one of the most important parts of the species' European range.

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