Data from: Evolution of population genetic structure of the British roe deer by natural and anthropogenic processes (Capreolus capreolus)
Human influence typically impacts on natural populations of conservation interest. These interactions are varied and sometimes complex, and may be negative and unintended or associated with conservation and management strategy. Understanding the details of how these interactions influence and are in...
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Zusammenfassung: | Human influence typically impacts on natural populations of conservation
interest. These interactions are varied and sometimes complex, and may be
negative and unintended or associated with conservation and management
strategy. Understanding the details of how these interactions influence
and are influenced by natural evolutionary processes is essential to the
development of effective conservation strategies. In this study we
investigate a species in Britain that has experienced both negative impact
through over-hunting in historical times and management efforts through
culls and translocations. At the same time, there are regional populations
that have been less affected by human influence. We use mtDNA and nuclear
microsatellite DNA markers to investigate patterns of connectivity and
diversity and find multiple insular populations in Britain that likely
evolved within the Holocene (when the habitat was free of ice). We
identify three concurrent processes. First, surviving indigenous
populations show highly provincial patterns of philopatry, maintaining and
generating population structure on a small geographic scale. Second,
founder populations into habitat extirpated of native populations have
expanded but remained largely insular. Third, introductions into
established populations generate some admixture. We discuss the
implications for the evolution of diversity of the integration of natural
processes with anthropogenic influences on population size and
distribution. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.v90p5 |