Luca Francesco Russo, Anna Loy, Agnese Lanzetti, Anjali Goswami, Carlo Meloro
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引用次数: 0
摘要
欧亚水獭是一种分布广泛的半水生哺乳动物,在上个世纪经历了严重的种群衰退,导致局部灭绝、种群减少和支离破碎。面临外部和内部压力的种群个体可能无法产生特定的发育结果,从而产生发育 "噪音"(发育不稳定性(DI))。导致发育不稳定的因素包括近亲繁殖抑制、种群瓶颈、栖息地丧失和暴露于污染。我们分析了两个欧洲水獭种群的波动不对称性(FA),作为发育不稳定性的替代指标。通过对英国和瑞典水獭头骨样本进行三维几何形态计量学分析,我们比较了水獭种群衰退前、衰退期间和衰退后的波动不对称程度。我们发现,与瑞典相比,英国种群的 FA 值更高。只有英国种群的不对称程度随着时间的推移有显著差异,在衰退阶段英国种群的不对称程度更高。英国种群的 FA 可归因于多氯联苯污染造成的瓶颈。更广泛地说,我们的研究表明,栖息地丧失、污染和有限的基因流可能是导致水獭种群数量下降的原因,这强调了继续调查的必要性,以确定和量化当地种群这一趋势背后的具体压力因素。
Exploring fluctuating asymmetry in two recovering populations of the Eurasian otter.
The Eurasian otter is a wide-ranging semi-aquatic mammal that underwent a significant population decline in the last century, leading to local extinctions, reduction and fragmentation of populations. The individuals of populations exposed to both external and internal stress may present the inability to produce a specific developmental outcome, generating developmental 'noise' (developmental instability (DI)). Factors contributing to DI include inbreeding depression, population bottlenecks, habitat loss and exposure to pollution. We analysed fluctuating asymmetry (FA) as a proxy of DI in two European otter populations that experienced a major decline in the 1990s. Using three-dimensional geometric morphometrics methods on skull samples of otters from the UK and Sweden, we compared the degree of FA both between populations before, during and after the decline. We found a higher FA in the UK populations compared with Sweden. The level of asymmetry differed significantly over time only in the UK population, where it was higher during the decline phase. FA in the UK populations can be attributed to the specific impact of polychlorinated biphenyls pollution that caused a bottleneck. More generally, our study suggests that habitat loss, pollution and limited gene flow may contribute to DI in declining otter populations, highlighting the need for continued investigation to identify and quantify the specific stressors behind this trend in local populations.