4.7 Article

Wolverine gene flow across a narrow climatic niche

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 90, Issue 11, Pages 3222-3232

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/08-1287.1

Keywords

corridors; effective population size; geographic information system; Gulo gulo; landscape resistance; least-cost paths; population genetics; wolverines

Categories

Funding

  1. PECASE award
  2. Bridger-Teton National Forest Challenge Cost Share Program
  3. Bullitt Foundation
  4. Canyon Creek Foundation
  5. Caribou-Targhee National Forest Challenge Cost Share Program
  6. Disney Wildlife Conservation Fund
  7. Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
  8. Greater Yellow-stone Coordinating Committee
  9. IDF and G Wildlife Grants Program
  10. Laura Moore-Cunningham Foundation
  11. Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks
  12. National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
  13. New York Community Trust
  14. Richard King Mellon Foundation
  15. Tapeats Fund
  16. Wilburforce Foundation
  17. Wyoming Game and Fish State Wildlife Grants Program

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Wolverines (Gulo gulo) are one of the rarest carnivores in the contiguous United States. Effective population sizes in Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming, where most of the wolverines in the contiguous United States exist, were calculated to be 35 (credible limits, 28 52) suggesting low abundance. Landscape features that influence wolverine population substructure and gene flow are largely unknown. Recent work has identified strong associations between areas with persistent spring snow and wolverine presence and range. We tested whether a dispersal model in which wolverines prefer to disperse through areas characterized by persistent spring snow cover produced least-cost paths among all individuals that correlated with genetic distance among individuals. Models simulating large preferences for dispersing within areas characterized by persistent spring snow explained the data better than a model based on Euclidean distance. Partial Mantel tests separating Euclidean distance from spring snow-cover-based effects indicated that Euclidean distance was not significant in describing patterns of genetic distance. Because these models indicated that successful dispersal paths followed areas characterized by spring snow cover, we used these understandings to derive empirically based least-cost corridor maps in the U. S. Rocky Mountains. These corridor maps largely explain previously published population subdivision patterns based on mitochondrial DNA and indicate that natural colonization of the southern Rocky Mountains by wolverines will be difficult but not impossible.

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