Maintenance of Genetic Diversity in an Introduced Island Population of Guanacos after Seven Decades and Two Severe Demographic Bottlenecks: Implications for Camelid Conservation
Author
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González Pérez, Benito Alejandro
Author
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Orozco-terWengel, Pablo
es_CL
Author
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Von Borries, Rainer
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Author
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Johnson, Warren E.
es_CL
Author
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Franklin, William L.
es_CL
Author
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Marín, Juan C.
es_CL
Admission date
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2015-01-08T19:55:56Z
Available date
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2015-01-08T19:55:56Z
Publication date
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2014
Cita de ítem
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PLoS ONE 9(3): e91714. (2014)
en_US
Identifier
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doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0091714
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/120396
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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Abstract
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Fifteen guanacos were introduced to Staats Island in the Falklands/Malvinas archipelago from Patagonia in the 1930s.
Twenty five years later, the population was culled from 300 to 10–20 individuals, but quickly rebounded to a population of
almost 400 animals that today retain the genetic signature of the founding event and later bottleneck. The goals of this
study were to (i) make a genetic assessment of this island population through comparisons with mainland populations and
simulations, and (ii) assess the likely source-population of the introduced guanacos. Genetic variation was estimated from
513 bp of mitochondrial DNA sequence and 15 microsatellite loci among 154 guanacos collected from eight localities,
including the adjacent mainland and the islands of Tierra del Fuego and Staats Island. Of the 23 haplotypes observed
among our samples, the Staats Island population only contained three haplotypes, all of which were shared with the coastal
Monte Leon population in southern Patagonia. Mitochondrial DNA and microsatellite variations on Staats Island were
comparable to most mainland populations and greater than those observed on Tierra del Fuego. Patterns of genetic
structure suggest that the Staats Island guanaco population was founded with animals from southern Patagonia (as
opposed to northern Patagonia or Tierra del Fuego), but that effective reductions in population size lasted only a few
generations and that surviving animals were a random sample of the pre-bottleneck genetic variation.
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Patrocinador
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This work was partially funded by Falkland Research Expeditions, Hidden Corners Inc., Turner Foundation, University of South Florida, and the Comisio´n
Nacional de Investigacio´ n, Ciencia y Tecnologı´a (CONICYT, Post-Doctoral grants Nu 3050046).
Maintenance of Genetic Diversity in an Introduced Island Population of Guanacos after Seven Decades and Two Severe Demographic Bottlenecks: Implications for Camelid Conservation