Habitat amount, not habitat configuration, best predicts population genetic structure in fragmented landscapes
Authored by Lenore Fahrig, Nathan D Jackson
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-015-0313-2
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Context Landscape structure shapes the genetic structure of populations
by delimiting spatial patterns of dispersal and reproduction across
generations. Thus, descriptions of human-altered landscapes can be used
to predict demographic and evolutionary outcomes of populations.
Effectively measuring landscape structure to predict genetic structure
requires that we understand the relative importance of distinct
components of landscape structure (e.g., habitat amount and
configuration) in creating spatial patterns of genetic variation.
Objectives We thus developed an individual-based simulation model to
test predictions about the relative importance of habitat amount and
configuration in producing genetic structure. We also investigated the
independent relationships between components of landscape structure and
the population dynamics that underlie genetic effects.
Methods We ran experiments in which we allowed gene flow and population
size to vary as emergent outcomes of the interactions between
hypothetical populations and heterogeneous landscapes.
Results We found that the amount of habitat in a landscape is a much
better predictor of genetic structure than is habitat configuration.
This pattern holds across a range of landscapes and dispersal distances
and behaviors. When habitat is non-contiguous (i.e., fragmented), habitat amount mediates production of genetic differentiation by
regulating both the size and isolation of habitat patches, which in turn
regulate population size and gene flow.
Conclusions These results suggest that habitat amount, a simple measure
that is easy to calculate, may often be the best metric for predicting
population genetic structure and that when possible, measures of habitat
amount and population size should be incorporated into landscape genetic
studies.
Tags
Diversity
Long-distance dispersal
Consequences
Extinction
Size
Flow
Indexes
Conspecific attraction
Florida scrub-jays
Complex landscapes