Historical and ecological determinants of genetic structure in arctic canids
- 17 July 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Ecology
- Vol. 16 (16) , 3466-3483
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-294x.2007.03381.x
Abstract
Wolves (Canis lupus) and arctic foxes (Alopex lagopus) are the only canid species found throughout the mainland tundra and arctic islands of North America. Contrasting evolutionary histories, and the contemporary ecology of each species, have combined to produce their divergent population genetic characteristics. Arctic foxes are more variable than wolves, and both island and mainland fox populations possess similarly high microsatellite variation. These differences result from larger effective population sizes in arctic foxes, and the fact that, unlike wolves, foxes were not isolated in discrete refugia during the Pleistocene. Despite the large physical distances and distinct ecotypes represented, a single, pamnictic population of arctic foxes was found which spans the Svalbard Archipelago and the North American range of the species. This pattern likely reflects both the absence of historical population bottlenecks and current, high levels of gene flow following frequent long-distance foraging movements. In contrast, genetic structure in wolves correlates strongly to transitions in habitat type, and is probably determined by natal habitat-biased dispersal. Nonrandom dispersal may be cued by relative levels of vegetation cover between tundra and forest habitats, but especially by wolf prey specialization on ungulate species of familiar type and behaviour (sedentary or migratory). Results presented here suggest that, through its influence on sea ice, vegetation, prey dynamics and distribution, continued arctic climate change may have effects as dramatic as those of the Pleistocene on the genetic structure of arctic canid species.Keywords
This publication has 83 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inference of Population Structure Under a Dirichlet Process ModelGenetics, 2007
- Genetic nature of eastern wolves: Past, present and futureConservation Genetics, 2006
- Intrapopulation variation in gray wolf isotope (δ15N and δ13C) profiles: implications for the ecology of individualsOecologia, 2005
- Gene flow among San Joaquin kit fox populations in a severely changed ecosystemConservation Genetics, 2005
- FAST‐TRACK: Integrating QTL mapping and genome scans towards the characterization of candidate loci under parallel selection in the lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis)Molecular Ecology, 2004
- Exclusion by interference competition? The relationship between red and arctic foxesOecologia, 2002
- Genetic differentiation of populations of Greenlandic Arctic foxPolar Research, 2001
- A Linkage Map of the Canine GenomeGenomics, 1997
- Microsatellite differentiation between Phillip Island and mainland Australian populations of the red foxVulpes vulpesMolecular Ecology, 1996
- Confidence Limits on Phylogenies: An Approach Using the BootstrapEvolution, 1985