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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

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Earth Sciences

University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Series

2004

Gene flow

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

High Dispersal In A Frog Species Suggests That It Is Vulnerable To Habitat Fragmentation, W. Chris Funk, Allison E. Greene, Paul Stephen Corn, Fred W. Allendorf Oct 2004

High Dispersal In A Frog Species Suggests That It Is Vulnerable To Habitat Fragmentation, W. Chris Funk, Allison E. Greene, Paul Stephen Corn, Fred W. Allendorf

United States Geological Survey: Staff Publications

Global losses of amphibian populations are a major conservation concern and their causes have generated substantial debate. Habitat fragmentation is considered one important cause of amphibian decline. However, if fragmentation is to be invoked as a mechanism of amphibian decline, it must first be established that dispersal is prevalent among contiguous amphibian populations using formal movement estimators. In contrast, if dispersal is naturally low in amphibians, fragmentation can be disregarded as a cause of amphibian declines and conservation efforts can be focused elsewhere. We examined dispersal rates in Columbia spotted frogs (Rana luteiventris) using capture–recapture analysis of over …


Genetic Structure Of Cougar Populations Across The Wyoming Basin: Metapopulation Or Megapopulation, Charles R. Anderson Jr., Federick G. Lindzey, David B. Mcdonald Jan 2004

Genetic Structure Of Cougar Populations Across The Wyoming Basin: Metapopulation Or Megapopulation, Charles R. Anderson Jr., Federick G. Lindzey, David B. Mcdonald

United States Geological Survey: Staff Publications

We examined the genetic structure of 5 Wyoming cougar (Puma concolor) populations surrounding the Wyoming Basin, as well as a population from southwestern Colorado. When using 9 microsatellite DNA loci, observed heterozygosity was similar among populations (HO = 0.49–0.59) and intermediate to that of other large carnivores. Estimates of genetic structure (FST = 0.028, RST = 0.029) and number of migrants per generation (Nm) suggested high gene flow. Nm was lowest between distant populations and highest among adjacent populations. Examination of these data, plus Mantel test results of genetic versus geographic distance (P ≤ 0.01), suggested both isolation …