4.3 Article

Conservation Genetics of the Endangered Sado Wrinkled Frog Glandirana Susurra Reveals Strong Regional Endemism and Population Bottlenecks

Journal

WETLANDS
Volume 42, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13157-022-01587-x

Keywords

Agriculture; Amphibians; Biodiversity Conservation; Connectivity; Wildlife-friendly Farming

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan
  2. JSPS KAKENHI [25292210]
  3. Sado City Biodiversity Academic Research Encouragement Program

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The Sado wrinkled frog (Glandirana susurra) shows a strong genetic structure on Sado Island, with three genetically distinct groups identified. The eastern and western groups have lower genetic diversity compared to the central group, which exhibits recent bottleneck events. Conservation recommendations include treating the three groups as separate units, increasing population sizes in the eastern and western groups, and improving gene flow among local populations in the central part of the island.
The Sado wrinkled frog (Glandirana susurra) is a recently described threatened amphibian species found only on Sado Island, a small island located off the north coast of Honshu, Japan. We conducted an extensive field survey and genetic analysis of G. susurra to identify its (1) large-scale distribution patterns, (2) remaining levels of genetic diversity, (3) major genetic groups (i.e., regional populations), and (4) levels of genetic differentiation and gene flow within and between its populations on the island. G. susurra was most prevalent in the central part of the island but was also observed in some areas to the east and west. We found a strong, hierarchical genetic structure that includes three genetically distinct groups of populations ('eastern', 'central' and 'western'). The eastern and western regional populations had significantly lower genetic diversity than the central population. We found, however, that many local populations in the central population had experienced several recent bottleneck events. Conservation recommendations for G. susurra include (1) considering the three major groups of G. susurra populations as separate units for purposes of conservation planning, (2) increasing the population sizes of the eastern and western populations which showed relatively lower genetic diversity, and (3) increasing habitat connectivity to facilitate gene flow among local populations in the central part of the island.

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