| Literature DB >> 25992617 |
Li Zhang1, Lu Dong1, Liu Lin2, Limin Feng1, Fan Yan1, Lanxin Wang3, Xianming Guo3, Aidong Luo3.
Abstract
We monitored the last remaining Asian elephant populations in China over the past decade. Using DNA tools and repeat genotyping, we estimated the population sizes from 654 dung samples collected from various areas. Combined with morphological individual identifications from over 6,300 elephant photographs taken in the wild, we estimated that the total Asian elephant population size in China is between 221 and 245. Population genetic structure and diversity were examined using a 556-bp fragment of mitochondrial DNA, and 24 unique haplotypes were detected from DNA analysis of 178 individuals. A phylogenetic analysis revealed two highly divergent clades of Asian elephants, α and β, present in Chinese populations. Four populations (Mengla, Shangyong, Mengyang, and Pu'Er) carried mtDNA from the α clade, and only one population (Nangunhe) carried mtDNA belonging to the β clade. Moreover, high genetic divergence was observed between the Nangunhe population and the other four populations; however, genetic diversity among the five populations was low, possibly due to limited gene flow because of habitat fragmentation. The expansion of rubber plantations, crop cultivation, and villages along rivers and roads had caused extensive degradation of natural forest in these areas. This had resulted in the loss and fragmentation of elephant habitats and had formed artificial barriers that inhibited elephant migration. Using Geographic Information System, Global Positioning System, and Remote Sensing technology, we found that the area occupied by rubber plantations, tea farms, and urban settlements had dramatically increased over the past 40 years, resulting in the loss and fragmentation of elephant habitats and forming artificial barriers that inhibit elephant migration. The restoration of ecological corridors to facilitate gene exchange among isolated elephant populations and the establishment of cross-boundary protected areas between China and Laos to secure their natural habitats are critical for the survival of Asian elephants in this region.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25992617 PMCID: PMC4438002 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Current distribution of Asian elephants in China with suggested corridors to link isolated populations.
Estimated sizes of Asian elephant populations in China over time.
| Region/Year | 1976 | 1983 | 1997 | 2003 | 2006 | 2009 | 2014 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xishuangbanna | |||||||
| Mengla | 37 | 23 | 14–17 | 30 | 25–32 | 35–40 | |
| Mengyang | 26 | 130 | 115–137 | 80–100 | 46–69 | 46–63 | 17–20 |
| Shangyong | 38 | 60 | 50–60 | 90–100 | 60–80 | 68 | 53–58 |
| Pu’Er | |||||||
| Simao | 7 | 5 | 5 | 15 | 15–23 | 39–47 | |
| Lancang | 12 | 9–12 | 13–17 | 15 | |||
| Jiangcheng | 42 | ||||||
| Lincang | |||||||
| Nangunhe | 22 | 12 | 18 | 18 | 18–23 | 18–23 | 20–23 |
| Dehong | |||||||
| Yingjiang | 16 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Total | 146 | 225 | 201–233 | 207–253 | 165–213 | 177–216 | 221–245 |
§ Seasonal migrating population between Simao and Mengyang
¶ Seasonal migrating population between Simao and Menghai
‡ Seasonal migrating population between Jiangcheng and Mengyang
Data sources:
1 Ref. 2
2 Ref. 30
3 Ref. 13
4 Ref. 4
5 Ref. 11
6 Ref. 3
Genetic diversity indices of Asian elephants based on mtDNA sequences.
| Conservation areas & Geographical unit | Estimated elephant population size | Sample size | Nucleotide diversity (Pi) | Haplotype diversity (Hd) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shangyong (SY) | 60–68 | 59 | 0.00140±0.00023 | 0.528±0.075 |
| Mengla (ML) | 25–32 | 32 | 0.00126±0.00052 | 0.337±0.103 |
| Mengyang (MY) | 50–82 | 55 | 0.00134±0.00061 | 0.414±0.083 |
| Xishuangbanna | - | 154 | 0.00136±0.00038 | 0.447±0.050 |
| Simao/Pu’er(SM) | 28–30 | 8 | 0.00091±0.00036 | 0.464±0.180 |
| Nangunhe (NGH) | 18–23 | 24 | 0.00826±0.00206 | 0.551±0.114 |
| China | 178–192 | 178 | 0.00726±0.0019 | 0.579±0.043 |
| Bhutan | 250–500 | 13 | 0.00652 | 0.601 |
| India | 22,800–32,400 | 6 | - | - |
| Bhutan-India | - | 19 | 0.00476 | 0.486 |
| Laos | 780–1,200 | 14 | 0.00471 | 0.698 |
| Vietnam | 70–100 | 4 | 0.00195 | 0.833 |
| Laos-Vietnam | - | 18 | 0.00431 | 0.745 |
| Mainland SE Asia | - | 37 | 0.00489 | 0.758 |
| Northern Sri Lanka | - | 18 | 0.00403 | 0.758 |
| Mid-lat. Sri Lanka | - | 25 | 0.00453 | 0.764 |
| Southern Sri Lanka | - | 38 | 0.01289 | 0.687 |
| Sri Lanka | 2,100–3,000 | 81 | 0.01643 | 0.855 |
| Southern India | 10,300–17,400 | 226 | 0.0036±0.0022 | 0.436±0.0289 |
| Asia | 36,790–51,160 | 118 | 0.0176 | 0.873 |
Data from Bhutan-India, Laos-Vietnam, Mainland, Sri Lanka, and Asia were cited from Ref. 19; data from Southern India were cited from Refs. 27–29.
Fig 2Statistical parsimony network of mtDNA haplotypes based on sequences constructed using the TCS program.
AA-AK & BA-BW haplotypes (grey) were from refs.34–35; all others were from present study, Abbreviations of haplotype names—NGH: Nangunhe (orange), ML: Mengla (green), SY: Shangyong (blue), SM: Simao/Pu’er (pink), MY: Mengyang (purple).
Fig 3Posterior assignment probabilities of Asian elephants in China determined by a Bayesian algorithm implemented in the program STRUCTURE v2.3.1 [32].
K = 4 was selected as the most likely number of clusters under the ln K and K difference comparison according to Evannoet al. [33]. Abbreviation of population names—NGH: Nangunhe, ML: Mengla, SY: Shangyong, SM: Simao/Pu’er, MY: Mengyang.