4.6 Article

Breed Locally, Disperse Globally: Fine-Scale Genetic Structure Despite Landscape-Scale Panmixia in a Fire-Specialist

期刊

PLOS ONE
卷 8, 期 6, 页码 -

出版社

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0067248

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资金

  1. Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks
  2. Bureau of Land Management
  3. Glacier National Park
  4. Glacier Fund
  5. U.S.D.A. Forest Service
  6. Y2Y Science Grants
  7. Wilburforce Foundation
  8. McIntire-Stennis Cooperative Research Program
  9. National Center for Landscape Fire Analysis
  10. Northwest Scientific Association
  11. Five Valleys Audubon
  12. American Association of University Women
  13. P.E.O. Scholar Award
  14. National Science Foundation
  15. University of Montana
  16. Fonds quebecois de recherche sur la nature et les technologies (FQRNT)
  17. Grand Jardins Provincial Park
  18. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

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An exciting advance in the understanding of metapopulation dynamics has been the investigation of how populations respond to ephemeral patches that go 'extinct' during the lifetime of an individual. Previous research has shown that this scenario leads to genetic homogenization across large spatial scales. However, little is known about fine-scale genetic structuring or how this changes over time in ephemeral patches. We predicted that species that specialize on ephemeral habitats will delay dispersal to exploit natal habitat patches while resources are plentiful and thus display fine-scale structure. To investigate this idea, we evaluated the effect of frequent colonization of ephemeral habitats on the fine-scale genetic structure of a fire specialist, the black-backed woodpecker (Picoides arcticus) and found a pattern of fine-scale genetic structure. We then tested for differences in spatial structure between sexes and detected a pattern consistent with male-biased dispersal. We also detected a temporal increase in relatedness among individuals within newly burned forest patches. Our results indicate that specialist species that outlive their ephemeral patches can accrue significant fine-scale spatial structure that does not necessarily affect spatial structure at larger scales. This highlights the importance of both spatial and temporal scale considerations in both sampling and data interpretation of molecular genetic results.

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