4.3 Article

Conservation genetics of two critically endangered island dwarf carnivores

期刊

CONSERVATION GENETICS
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 35-49

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10592-021-01401-x

关键词

Caribbean islands; Cozumel Island; Endemic insular fauna; Mexico; Nasua nelsoni; Procyon pygmaeus

资金

  1. Comision Nacional de Areas Naturales Protegidas (Programa de Recuperacion de Especies en Riesgo)
  2. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACyT) [33635-V]
  3. Fondo Sectorial de Investigacion Ambiental [Semarnat-2002-C01-0571]
  4. Comision Nacional sobre el Conocimiento y Uso de la Biodiversidad (Conabio) [LI028]
  5. UC NEXUS-CONACYT Collaborative Research Grants [CN-12627]
  6. CONACyT [101861, CVU 440854, 271066]
  7. Papiit [IN217910]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Genetic studies of the critically endangered dwarf carnivores, the pygmy raccoon and the dwarf coati from Cozumel Island, reveal divergence from mainland populations, lower genetic diversity and population sizes. Both species show historical and contemporary bottleneck signals, with potential genetic introgression and risk of hybridization from the introduction of mainland species. Conservation efforts should take into account the unique genetic patterns to ensure the long-term viability of these endemic carnivores.
Genetic diversity is crucial for conservation biology and for understanding evolutionary processes. Oceanic islands harbor a unique biota and high endemism, with populations frequently facing detrimental genetic processes (e.g. drift, bottlenecks). Human activities like habitat transformation further increase extinction risk of insular biota. Mammals comprise the most endangered group among insular fauna. Our aim was to evaluate the genetic and evolutionary patterns of two critically endangered dwarf carnivores from Cozumel Island, the pygmy raccoon (Procyon pygmaeus) and the dwarf coati (Nasua nelsoni), at both historical and contemporary evolutionary scales. We also reviewed their genetic relationships with their mainland counterparts (P. lotor, N. narica), not intended to describe their phylogeny but to ascertain their endemism. Our mitochondrial results support that both Cozumel carnivores are divergent from continental populations, strengthening their endemic status. Both species showed moderate levels of nuclear genetic diversity that were, as expected for island populations, lower in comparison with their mainland congeneric species; they also exhibited significantly low population sizes. We documented historical and contemporary bottleneck signals for P. pygmaeus, whereas N. nelsoni may be suffering the initial stages of a bottleneck not yet fully manifested. The pygmy raccoon is structured into two isolated genetic clusters likely due to interactions with humans on the north of the island, where most potential for disease transmission and health problems exist. We also add evidence about the introduction of the mainland species into the island, risking genetic introgression and hybridization. We discuss specific conservation measures that should include our genetic information, directed to the long-term viability of these endemic carnivores.

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