Data from: Consequences for conservation: population density and genetic effects on reproduction of an endangered lagomorph
Understanding reproduction and mating systems is important for managers tasked with conserving vulnerable species. Genetic tools allow biologists to investigate reproduction and mating systems with high resolution and are particularly useful for species that are otherwise difficult to study in their...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding reproduction and mating systems is important for managers
tasked with conserving vulnerable species. Genetic tools allow biologists
to investigate reproduction and mating systems with high resolution and
are particularly useful for species that are otherwise difficult to study
in their natural environments. We conducted parentage analyses using 19
nuclear DNA microsatellite loci to assess the influence of population
density, genetic diversity, and ancestry on reproduction, and to examine
the mating system of pygmy rabbits (Brachylagus idahoensis) bred in large
naturalized enclosures for the reintroduction and recovery of the
endangered distinct population in central Washington, USA. Reproductive
output for females and males decreased as population density and
individual homozygosity increased. We identified an interaction indicating
that male reproductive output decreased as genetic diversity declined at
high population densities, but there was no effect at low densities. Males
with high amounts (>50%) of Washington ancestry had higher
reproductive output than the other ancestry groups, while reproductive
output was decreased for males with high northern Utah/Wyoming ancestry
and females with high Oregon/Nevada ancestry. Females and males bred with
an average of 3.8 and 3.6 mates per year, respectively, and we found no
evidence of positive or negative assortative mating with regards to
ancestry. Multiple paternity was confirmed in 81% of litters, and we
report the first documented cases of juvenile breeding by pygmy rabbits.
This study demonstrates how variation in population density, genetic
diversity, and ancestry impact fitness for an endangered species being
bred for conservation. Our results advance understanding of basic life
history characteristics for a cryptic species that is difficult to study
in the wild, and provide lessons for managing populations of vulnerable
species in captive and free-ranging populations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.t57k5 |