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Island populations are at heightened risk of inbreeding due to reduced mating opportunities with unrelated conspecifics. Extensive inbreeding can result in inbreeding depression (reduced fitness of individuals with related parents). Alexander Archipelago wolves () are a geographically isolated subspecies that occur in the Southeast Alaskan panhandle, USA, and coastal British Columbia, Canada. Wolves on the Prince of Wales Island complex (POW) in Southeast Alaska are expected to have lower levels of resiliency because they are a small, insular population that has experienced habitat fragmentation and cycles of moderate to heavy harvest. To understand the extent of population structure and inbreeding in Alexander Archipelago wolves, we designed a DNA hybridization capture for wolves and sequenced captured DNA from 58 individuals sampled from across Southeast Alaska during 2002-2016. Estimates of the proportion of the genome in runs of homozygosity ( ) regardless of run length, revealed that POW wolves were most inbred compared to wolves in other areas of Southeast Alaska. Wolves on POW also had more long (≥ 10 Mb) runs of homozygosity than the other populations we assessed, indicating more frequent mating between individuals with recent common ancestors (1-10 generations ago). This pattern indicates a smaller population size for POW wolves in the recent past compared to other Southeast Alaskan populations. Wolves on POW exhibit an extent of inbreeding similar to that observed in Isle Royale National Park wolves, a population that has exhibited severe inbreeding depression. Our work demonstrates the utility of using genomic capture data to infer individual inbreeding so that proactive management (e.g., setting population targets and harvest quotas, curtailing habitat alteration, etc.) can be considered to ensure the long-term sustainability of small, isolated populations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.70144 | DOI Listing |
Evol Appl
August 2025
National Genomics Center for Wildlife and Fish Conservation, Rocky Mountain Research Station U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service Missoula Montana USA.
Island populations are at heightened risk of inbreeding due to reduced mating opportunities with unrelated conspecifics. Extensive inbreeding can result in inbreeding depression (reduced fitness of individuals with related parents). Alexander Archipelago wolves () are a geographically isolated subspecies that occur in the Southeast Alaskan panhandle, USA, and coastal British Columbia, Canada.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
July 2025
Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Juneau, Alaska, USA.
Legacies of land use can persist for decades, thereby impacting populations, communities, and ecosystems long after the original disturbance has concluded. The coastal rainforests of western North America were fundamentally transformed by commercial logging throughout the 20th century, resulting in depauperate second-growth forests that provide limited understory production and foraging habitat for herbivores. The Tongass National Forest in Alaska, USA, is the largest contiguous tract of coastal temperate rainforest in the world, but nearly 200,000 ha of second-growth forest have created a need to restore understory plant communities and foraging habitat for ungulates like Sitka black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus sitkensis), a regional indicator of forest health and key subsistence resource for local and Indigenous communities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Ecol Evol
September 2025
Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Across the world, human (anthropophonic) sounds add to sounds of biological (biophonic) and geophysical (geophonic) origin, with human contributions including both speech and technophony (sounds of technological devices). To characterize society's contribution to the global soundscapes, we used passive acoustic recorders at 139 sites across 6 continents, sampling both urban green spaces and nearby pristine sites continuously for 3 years in a paired design. Recordings were characterized by bird species richness and by 14 complementary acoustic indices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZookeys
June 2025
Herpetology Laboratory, Department of Biology, La Sierra University, 4500 Riverwalk Parkway, Riverside, California 92505, USA La Sierra University Riverside United States of America.
A new species of karst-dwelling Bent-toed Gecko (genus ) is described from an unexplored karstic archipelago in western Cambodia. is composed of four allopatric, monophyletic mitochondrial lineages based on the ND2 gene. All are statistically diagnosable from one another based on univariate (ANOVA) and multivariate (PCA, DAPC, and MFA) analyses using a suite of size-corrected morphometric, meristic, and categorical color pattern and morphological characters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new species of gekkonid lizard is described from Phnom Khpoh, an isolated karstic hill within an extensive karstic archipelago in Battambang Province, western Cambodia. Phylogenetic analysis using a 1041 base pair fragment of the mitochondrial gene ND2 recovered Hemiphyllodactylus khpoh sp. nov.
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