Estimating the Effective Size of European Wolf Populations
Details
Volume | 17 |
---|---|
Magazine issue | 10 |
Pages (to-from) | e70021 |
Type | A1: Web of Science-article |
Category | Research |
Magazine | Evolutionary Applications |
Issns | 1752-4571 |
Publisher | Wiley-Blackwell |
Language | English |
Bibtex
@misc{a2bd925e-5e78-4449-b754-aa1b97bf1d09,
title = "Estimating the Effective Size of European Wolf Populations",
abstract = "Molecular methods are routinely used to estimate the effective size of populations (Ne). However, underlying model assumptions are frequently violated to an unknown extent. Although simulations can detect sources of bias and help to adjust sampling strategies and analyses methods, additional information from empirical data can also be used to calibrate methods and improve molecular Ne estimation methods. Here, we take advantage of long-term genetic and ecological monitoring data of the grey wolf (Canis lupus) in Germany, and detailed population genetic studies in Poland, Spain and Portugal to improve Ne estimation strategies in this species, and species with similar life history traits. We first calculated Ne from average lifetime reproductive success and detailed census data from the German population, which served as a baseline to compare to molecular estimates based on linkage disequilibrium and sibship frequency. This yielded a robust Ne/Nc estimation that we used to calibrate molecular estimates of German, Polish and Iberian wolf populations. The linkage disequilibrium method was strongly influenced by spatial genetic structure, much more than the sibship frequency method. When Ne was estimated in local neighbourhoods, both methods yielded comparable results. Estimates of the metapopulation effective size seemed to correspond generally well with the sum of the estimates of local neighbourhoods. Overall, we found that the number of packs is a good proxy of the effective population size. Using this as a rule of thumb, we evaluated for all European wolf populations the Ne 500 indicator and concluded that half of the European wolf populations do not yet fulfil this criterion.",
author = "Joachim Mergeay and Sander Smet and Sebastian Collet and Sabina Nowak and Ilka Reinhardt and Gesa Kluth and Maciej Szewczyk and Raquel Godinho and Carsten Nowak and Robert W. Mysłajek and Gregor Rolshausen",
year = "2024",
month = oct,
day = "22",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.70021",
language = "English",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
address = "Belgium,
type = "Other"
}
Authors
Joachim MergeaySander Smet
Sebastian Collet
Sabina Nowak
Ilka Reinhardt
Gesa Kluth
Maciej Szewczyk
Raquel Godinho
Carsten Nowak
Robert W. Mysłajek
Gregor Rolshausen