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Inbreeding is reduced by female-biased dispersal and mating behavior in Ethiopian wolves
Authors:Randall, Deborah A.   Pollinger, John P.   Wayne, Robert K.   Tallents, Lucy A.   Johnson, Paul J.   Macdonald, David W.
Affiliation:a Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, University of Oxford, Tubney House, Abingdon Road, Tubney OX13 5QL, UK b Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, 621 Charles E. Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA
Abstract:Molecular tools have enabled wildlife researchers to obtainaccurate information on the kinship, mating behavior, and dispersalof individuals. We genotyped 192 Ethiopian wolves (n = 29 packs)in the Bale Mountains for 17 microsatellite loci to 1) elucidatekinship within and between packs, 2) assess parentage of pups,and 3) evaluate whether inbreeding is avoided by dispersal and/ormating behavior. Mean pairwise relatedness within packs (R =0.39) was significantly greater than that estimated from randomassignment of individuals to packs. However, breeding pairswere most often unrelated, suggesting that female-biased dispersalreduces inbreeding. We assigned maternity to 49 pups and paternityto 47 pups (n = 12 litters) using a combination of exclusion,likelihood analyses (using CERVUS software), and sibship reconstruction.Multiple paternity occurred in 33% of litters; extrapack paternityaccounted for 28% of all resolved paternities, occurring in50% of litters. We found no evidence that extrapack copulationsreduce inbreeding; however, more detailed analyses may elucidatethe effect of recent population declines and demographic disturbancesdue to recurring disease outbreaks. The adaptive advantagesof female-biased dispersal and the observed mating system arediscussed in relation to Ethiopian wolf sociobiology and ecology.
Keywords:canids   CERVUS   dispersal   EPC   kinship   microsatellites   paternity.
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