4.7 Article

Do harvest refuges buffer kangaroos against evolutionary responses to selective harvesting?

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 85, Issue 7, Pages 2003-2017

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/03-4111

Keywords

body size; environmental stochasticity; genetic effects; harvest refuge; individual-based model; kangaroo; Macropus rufus; size-selective harvesting

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There is a wealth of literature documenting a directional change of body size in heavily harvested populations. Most of this work concentrates on aquatic systems, but terrestrial populations are equally at risk. This paper explores the capacity of harvest refuges to counteract potential effects of size-selective harvesting on the allele frequency,of populations. We constructed a stochastic, individual-based model parameterized with data on red kangaroos. Because we do not know which part of individual growth would change in the course of natural selection, we explored the effects of two alternative models of individual growth in which alleles affect either the growth rate or the maximum size. The model results show that size-selective harvesting can result in significantly smaller kangaroos for a given age when the entire population is subject to harvesting. In contrast, in scenarios that include dispersal from harvest refuges, the initial allele frequency remains virtually unchanged.

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