4.2 Article

Fine-scale genetic and social structuring in a central Appalachian white-tailed deer herd

期刊

JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY
卷 91, 期 3, 页码 681-689

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1644/09-MAMM-A-258.1

关键词

female philopatry; genetic structure; Odocoileus virginianus; relatedness; social groups; spatial autocorreladon; white-tailed deer

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资金

  1. Mead Westvaco Corporation
  2. West Virginia Division of Natural Resources
  3. United States Department of Agriculture National Research [00-35101-9284, 03-35101-13719]

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Spatial genetic structure in white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) has been examined at regional scales, but genetic markers with the resolution to detect fine-scale patterns have appeared only recently. We used a panel of microsatellite DNA markers, radiotelemetry data, and visual observations of marked deer to study fine-scale social and genetic structure in a high-density population of white-tailed deer (12-20 deer/km(2)). We collected genetic data on 229 adult females, 102 of which were assigned to 28 social groups. Our results were consistent with the conceptual model of white-tailed deer social structure, where philopatric females form social groups composed of related individuals. Within-group relatedness values approached the expected value for 1st cousins (R = 0.103, SE = 0.033), but individuals among groups (R = 0.014, SE = 0.003) and overall (R = -0.009, SE = 0.003) were unrelated. Fixation indices revealed a significant departure from equilibrium values among social groups (F-ST = 0.076, SE = 0.007) and an excess of heterozygotes within groups (F-ls = 0.050, SE = 0.018), consistent with theoretical expectations for mammal populations characterized by female philopatry and a polygynous mating system. Analyses of spatial autocorrelation indicated genetic structuring occurred at a very fine spatial scale, where pairs of adult females within 1 km were genetically nonindependent. The occurrence of fine-scale genetic and social structure has implications for the ecology and management of white-tailed deer, including habitat use and resource competition, offspring sex allocation theories, disease transmission, and the consideration of social behaviors in management. DOI: 10.1644/09-MAMM-A-258.1.

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