期刊论文详细信息
Genes
Congruent Genetic and Demographic Dispersal Rates in a Natural Metapopulation at Equilibrium
Camille Turlure1  Quentin Dubois1  Nicolas Schtickzelle1  Delphine Legrand2  Michel Baguette2  JérômeG. Prunier2 
[1] Earth and Life Institute, Biodiversity Research Centre, Université Catholique de Louvain, 1348 Louvain‐la‐Neuve, Belgium;Theoretical and Experimental Ecology Station (UMR 5371), National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), Paul Sabatier University (UPS), 09200 Moulis, France;
关键词: butterfly metapopulation;    dispersal;    genetic structure;    demography;    spatio-temporal stability;    environmental fluctuations;   
DOI  :  10.3390/genes12030362
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Understanding the functioning of natural metapopulations at relevant spatial and temporal scales is necessary to accurately feed both theoretical eco-evolutionary models and conservation plans. One key metric to describe the dynamics of metapopulations is dispersal rate. It can be estimated with either direct field estimates of individual movements or with indirect molecular methods, but the two approaches do not necessarily match. We present a field study in a large natural metapopulation of the butterfly Boloria eunomia in Belgium surveyed over three generations using synchronized demographic and genetic datasets with the aim to characterize its genetic structure, its dispersal dynamics, and its demographic stability. By comparing the census and effective population sizes, and the estimates of dispersal rates, we found evidence of stability at several levels: constant inter-generational ranking of population sizes without drastic historical changes, stable genetic structure and geographically-influenced dispersal movements. Interestingly, contemporary dispersal estimates matched between direct field and indirect genetic assessments. We discuss the eco-evolutionary mechanisms that could explain the described stability of the metapopulation, and suggest that destabilizing agents like inter-generational fluctuations in population sizes could be controlled by a long adaptive history of the species to its dynamic local environment. We finally propose methodological avenues to further improve the match between demographic and genetic estimates of dispersal.

【 授权许可】

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