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Lindsey E. Carmichael Julia Krizan John A. Nagy Mathieu Dumond Deborah Johnson Alasdair Veitch Curtis Strobeck 《Conservation Genetics》2008,9(4):879-892
Wolves in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago face several challenges to persistence: a harsh habitat, an unstable prey base,
and potentially significant anthropogenic influences. These external factors, if combined with genetic constraints common
to island populations, could be particularly difficult to withstand. To determine the genetic status of Arctic Island wolves,
we used 14 microsatellite loci to estimate population variation and the extent of inter-island and island-mainland gene flow.
All island populations were significantly less variable than mainland wolves; although inbreeding is currently insignificant,
the two least variable populations, Banks and the High Arctic (Ellesmere and Devon Islands), showed genetic signatures of
recent population declines. Recovery after a bottleneck appears to result, in large part, via recolonization from other islands.
These extinction-recolonization dynamics, and the degree of similarity among island wolves revealed by Bayesian clustering,
suggest that Arctic Island wolves function as a metapopulation. Persistence of the metapopulation may be supported by periodic
migration from mainland populations, occurring primarily through two corridors: Baffin Island in the Eastern Arctic, and Victoria
Island in the Western Arctic. This gene flow could be compromised or eliminated by loss—due to climatic warming or increased
human activity—of sea ice in the Northwest Passage.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. 相似文献
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Dumond H Maufroid JP Ko CI Chardard D Chesnel A Flament S 《Molecular reproduction and development》2008,75(3):439-449
Wild type embryos of the newt Pleurodeles waltl were used to realize parabiosis, a useful model to study the effect of endogenous circulating hormones on gonad development. The genotypic sex of each parabiont (ZZ male or ZW female) was determined early from the analysis of the sex chromosome borne marker peptidase-1. In ZZ/ZZ and ZW/ZW associations, gonads develop according to genetic sex. In ZZ/ZW associations, the ZZ gonads differentiate as normal testes while ZW gonads development shows numerous alterations. At the beginning of sex differentiation, these ZW gonads possess a reduced number of germ cells and a reduced expression of steroidogenic factor 1 and P450-aromatase mRNAs when compared to gonads from ZW/ZW associations. During gonad differentiation, conversely to the control situation, these germ cells do not enter meiosis as corroborated by chromatin status and absence of the meiosis entry marker DMC1; the activity of the estradiol-producing enzyme P450-aromatase is as low as in ZZ gonads. At adulthood, no germ cells are observed on histological sections, consistently with the absence of VASA expression. At this stage, the testis-specific marker DMRT1 is expressed only in ZZ gonads, suggesting that the somatic compartment of the ZW gonad is not masculinized. So, when exposed to ZZ hormones, ZW gonads reach the undifferentiated status but the ovary differentiation does not occur. This gonad is inhibited by a process affecting both somatic and germ cells. Additionally, the ZW gonad inhibition does not occur in the case of an exogenous estradiol treatment of larvae. 相似文献
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Carmichael LE Krizan J Nagy JA Fuglei E Dumond M Johnson D Veitch A Berteaux D Strobeck C 《Molecular ecology》2007,16(16):3466-3483
Wolves (Canis lupus) and arctic foxes (Alopex lagopus) are the only canid species found throughout the mainland tundra and arctic islands of North America. Contrasting evolutionary histories, and the contemporary ecology of each species, have combined to produce their divergent population genetic characteristics. Arctic foxes are more variable than wolves, and both island and mainland fox populations possess similarly high microsatellite variation. These differences result from larger effective population sizes in arctic foxes, and the fact that, unlike wolves, foxes were not isolated in discrete refugia during the Pleistocene. Despite the large physical distances and distinct ecotypes represented, a single, panmictic population of arctic foxes was found which spans the Svalbard Archipelago and the North American range of the species. This pattern likely reflects both the absence of historical population bottlenecks and current, high levels of gene flow following frequent long-distance foraging movements. In contrast, genetic structure in wolves correlates strongly to transitions in habitat type, and is probably determined by natal habitat-biased dispersal. Nonrandom dispersal may be cued by relative levels of vegetation cover between tundra and forest habitats, but especially by wolf prey specialization on ungulate species of familiar type and behaviour (sedentary or migratory). Results presented here suggest that, through its influence on sea ice, vegetation, prey dynamics and distribution, continued arctic climate change may have effects as dramatic as those of the Pleistocene on the genetic structure of arctic canid species. 相似文献
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