A dynamic simulation model for evaluating effects of removal and contraception on genetic variation and demography of Pryer Mountain wild horses
Authored by JE Gross
Date Published: 2000
DOI: 10.1016/s0006-3207(00)00078-1
Sponsors:
United States Geological Survey (USGS)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
I used an individual-based model to simulate population dynamics and
changes in genetic variation of horses in the Pryer Mountain Wild Horse
Range under a range of management strategies. Management strategies
included population objectives of 90 to 180 horses and removal and/or
contraception of animals of random, young, or old ages. Populations
controlled only by removals fluctuated widely in size and generally
exceeded objectives by > 20\%. Populations controlled by contraceptives
remained within 3\% of objective. Over a 200-year period, populations
were very likely to lose alleles with an initial frequency of < 3\%, which included nearly 30\% of alleles in the population. Allelic
diversity was lost faster than population-level heterozygosity. Removal
or contraceptive treatment of older animals hastened the loss of genetic
variation compared to treatment of random-aged or young animals. Rate of
loss of genetic variation was directly related to generation interval, and differences in loss of genetic variation were greater between
treatments of old and young animals than between populations that
differed in size by a factor of 2. These results apply to management of
many long-lived species in harvested populations and they illustrate the
importance of actions that modify age structure and generation interval.
(C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Management
Conservation
Population-size
Large mammals
Immunocontraception