| Literature DB >> 26966677 |
Jose L Horreo1, Rainer Raab2, Péter Spakovszky3, Juan Carlos Alonso4.
Abstract
The genetic diversity, population structure and gene flow of the Great Bustards (Otis tarda) living in Austria-Slovakia-West Hungary (West-Pannonian region), one of the few populations of this globally threatened species that survives across the Palaearctic, has been assessed for the first time in this study. Fourteen recently developed microsatellite loci identified one single population in the study area, with high values of genetic diversity and gene flow between two different genetic subunits. One of these subunits (Heideboden) was recognized as a priority for conservation, as it could be crucial to maintain connectivity with the central Hungarian population and thus contribute to keeping contemporary genetic diversity. Current conservation efforts have been successful in saving this threatened population from extinction two decades ago, and should continue to guarantee its future survival.Entities:
Keywords: Conservation; Fragmentation; Gene flow; Management; Metapopulation; Microsatellite; Population structure
Year: 2016 PMID: 26966677 PMCID: PMC4782711 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1759
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Map showing the distribution of the studied Great Bustard breeding areas in Austria-West Hungary-Slovakia (Weinviertel, Marchfeld and Heideboden; orange patches), and the location of the study area within central Europe (inset map on the upper right corner).
These three orange areas include, respectively: SPA “Westliches Weinviertel” (AT1209000), ca.7441 ha; a large part of SPA “Sandboden und Praterterrasse” (AT1213V00), ca. 11.083 ha; and SPA “Parndorfer Platte—Heideboden” (AT1125129) -ca. 7260 ha- plus the northern part of Hungarian SPA “Mosni-sík” (HUFH10004) -ca. 3159 ha- and the Slovakian SPA ”Sysl’ovské polia” (SKCHVU029) -ca. 1777 ha-. The black dots indicate the collection sites of the samples used for genetic analyses. The two capital cities, Vienna and Bratislava (pink patches), the perimeters of the suburban areas around them (black lines around pink patches), and the initials of the four countries converging in this geographic region (Austria, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Hungary), and their national borders (black lines) are also indicated. The inset map shows the distribution in central Europe in the period 1995–2014 (Source: data base from Rainer Raab, including information from Péter Spakovszky and Miklós Lóránt for Hungary and Torsten Langgemach and Henrik Watzke for Germany).
Number of alleles per locus and outcome of tests for deviation from Hardy-Weinberg proportions (*P < 0.05, and **P < 0.01) after Bonferroni correction in the three sampled West-Pannonian Great Bustard breeding areas (see Fig. 1) for the 12 studied microsatellite loci.
| Ot1 | Ot2 | Ot4 | Ot5 | Ot7 | Ot8 | Ot9 | Ot10 | Ot11 | Ot12 | Ot13 | Ot14 | Na | AR | B | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weinviertel | 3** | 2 | 4 | 6 | 4** | 2 | 6 | 2 | 6** | 2** | 5 | 6 | 4.00 (1.76) | 3.27 (1.37) | 0.44 (0.22) | 0.49 (0.23) | 0.11 | 0.67 |
| Marchfeld | 2 | 2 | 3 | 5 | 2 | 2** | 4* | 3 | 4 | 2** | 5 | 5 | 3.25 (1.29) | 3.07 (1.22) | 0.50 (0.28) | 0.52 (0.23) | 0.03 | 0.21 |
| Heideboden | 3** | 2 | 6 | 9 | 5** | 1 | 6** | 4** | 7** | 3** | 10 | 6 | 5.17 (2.72) | 3.60 (1.72) | 0.42 (0.29) | 0.49 (0.29) | 0.13 | 0.27 |
Notes.
mean allele number per locus
allelic richness
observed heterozygosity
expected heterozygosity
inbreeding coefficient
P-value for Bottleneck analyses.
Standard deviation is shown between brackets.
Figure 2Allele frequency distribution of the twelve analysed microsatellite loci across the three breeding areas.
Figure 3Output of BAPS (A) and DAPC analysis with (B) and without (C) the find.clusters function showing the membership fraction (columns) of the inferred genetic units for West-Pannonian Great Bustards in each individual of the three studied breeding areas.
Same colour in different individuals indicates that they belong to the same cluster.
Genetic differentiation among West-Pannonian bustard breeding areas pairs measured with F values (below diagonal; **P-value < 0.01) and gene flow among them measured as the number of migrants per generation (Nm; above diagonal).
| Weinviertel | Marchfeld | Heideboden | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weinviertel | – | 2.39 | 3.07 |
| Marchfeld | 0.014 | – | 2.59 |
| Heideboden | 0.036** | 0.055** | – |