22 results on '"Spong, Goran"'
Search Results
2. Deriving Dispersal Distances from Genetic Data
- Author
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Spong, Goran and Creel, Scott
- Published
- 2001
3. Spatial patterns of large African cats: a large‐scale study on density, home range size, and home range overlap of lions Panthera leo and leopards Panthera pardus
- Author
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Nams, Vilis O., primary, Parker, Dan M., additional, Weise, Florian J., additional, Patterson, Bruce D., additional, Buij, Ralph, additional, Radloff, Frans G. T., additional, Vanak, Abi Tamim, additional, Tumenta, Pricelia N., additional, Hayward, Matt W., additional, Swanepoel, Lourens H., additional, Funston, Paul J., additional, Bauer, Hans, additional, Power, R. John, additional, O'Brien, John, additional, O'Brien, Timothy G., additional, Tambling, Craig J., additional, de Iongh, Hans H., additional, Ferreira, Sam M., additional, Owen‐Smith, Norman, additional, Cain, James W., additional, Fattebert, Julien, additional, Croes, Barbara M., additional, Spong, Goran, additional, Loveridge, Andrew J., additional, Houser, Ann Marie, additional, Golabek, Krystyna A., additional, Begg, Colleen M., additional, Grant, Tanith, additional, Trethowan, Paul, additional, Musyoki, Charles, additional, Menges, Vera, additional, Creel, Scott, additional, Balme, Guy A., additional, Pitman, Ross T., additional, Bissett, Charlene, additional, Jenny, David, additional, Schuette, Paul, additional, Wilmers, Christopher C., additional, Hunter, Luke T. B., additional, Kinnaird, Margaret F., additional, Begg, Keith S., additional, Owen, Cailey R., additional, Steyn, Villiers, additional, Bockmuehl, Dirk, additional, Munro, Stuart J., additional, Mann, Gareth K. H., additional, du Preez, Byron D., additional, Marker, Laurie L., additional, Huqa, Tuqa J., additional, Cozzi, Gabriele, additional, Frank, Laurence G., additional, Nyoni, Phumuzile, additional, Stein, Andrew B., additional, Kasiki, Samuel M., additional, Macdonald, David W., additional, Martins, Quinton E., additional, van Vuuren, Rudie J., additional, Stratford, Ken J., additional, Bidner, Laura R., additional, Oriol‐Cotteril, Alayne, additional, Maputla, Nakedi W., additional, Maruping‐Mzileni, Nkabeng, additional, Parker, Tim, additional, van't Zelfde, Maarten, additional, Isbell, Lynne A., additional, Beukes, Otto B., additional, and Beukes, Maya, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Spatial patterns of large African cats : a large-scale study on density, home range size, and home range overlap of lions Panthera leo and leopards Panthera pardus
- Author
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Nams, Vilis O., Parker, Dan M., Weise, Florian J., Patterson, Bruce D., Buij, Ralph, Radloff, Frans G.T., Vanak, Abi Tamim, Tumenta, Pricelia N., Hayward, Matt W., Swanepoel, Lourens H., Funston, Paul J., Bauer, Hans, Power, R.J., O'Brien, John, O'Brien, Timothy G., Tambling, Craig J., de Iongh, Hans H., Ferreira, Sam M., Owen-Smith, Norman, Cain, James W., Fattebert, Julien, Croes, Barbara M., Spong, Goran, Loveridge, Andrew J., Houser, Ann Marie, Golabek, Krystyna A., Begg, Colleen M., Grant, Tanith, Trethowan, Paul, Musyoki, Charles, Menges, Vera, Creel, Scott, Balme, Guy A., Pitman, Ross T., Bissett, Charlene, Jenny, David, Schuette, Paul, Wilmers, Christopher C., Hunter, Luke T.B., Kinnaird, Margaret F., Begg, Keith S., Owen, Cailey R., Steyn, Villiers, Bockmuehl, Dirk, Munro, Stuart J., Mann, Gareth K.H., du Preez, Byron D., Marker, Laurie L., Huqa, Tuqa J., Cozzi, Gabriele, Frank, Laurence G., Nyoni, Phumuzile, Stein, Andrew B., Kasiki, Samuel M., Macdonald, David W., Martins, Quinton E., van Vuuren, Rudie J., Stratford, Ken J., Bidner, Laura R., Oriol-Cotteril, Alayne, Maputla, Nakedi W., Maruping-Mzileni, Nkabeng, Parker, Tim, van't Zelfde, Maarten, Isbell, Lynne A., Beukes, Otto B., Beukes, Maya, Nams, Vilis O., Parker, Dan M., Weise, Florian J., Patterson, Bruce D., Buij, Ralph, Radloff, Frans G.T., Vanak, Abi Tamim, Tumenta, Pricelia N., Hayward, Matt W., Swanepoel, Lourens H., Funston, Paul J., Bauer, Hans, Power, R.J., O'Brien, John, O'Brien, Timothy G., Tambling, Craig J., de Iongh, Hans H., Ferreira, Sam M., Owen-Smith, Norman, Cain, James W., Fattebert, Julien, Croes, Barbara M., Spong, Goran, Loveridge, Andrew J., Houser, Ann Marie, Golabek, Krystyna A., Begg, Colleen M., Grant, Tanith, Trethowan, Paul, Musyoki, Charles, Menges, Vera, Creel, Scott, Balme, Guy A., Pitman, Ross T., Bissett, Charlene, Jenny, David, Schuette, Paul, Wilmers, Christopher C., Hunter, Luke T.B., Kinnaird, Margaret F., Begg, Keith S., Owen, Cailey R., Steyn, Villiers, Bockmuehl, Dirk, Munro, Stuart J., Mann, Gareth K.H., du Preez, Byron D., Marker, Laurie L., Huqa, Tuqa J., Cozzi, Gabriele, Frank, Laurence G., Nyoni, Phumuzile, Stein, Andrew B., Kasiki, Samuel M., Macdonald, David W., Martins, Quinton E., van Vuuren, Rudie J., Stratford, Ken J., Bidner, Laura R., Oriol-Cotteril, Alayne, Maputla, Nakedi W., Maruping-Mzileni, Nkabeng, Parker, Tim, van't Zelfde, Maarten, Isbell, Lynne A., Beukes, Otto B., and Beukes, Maya
- Abstract
Spatial patterns of and competition for resources by territorial carnivores are typically explained by two hypotheses: 1) the territorial defence hypothesis and 2) the searching efficiency hypothesis. According to the territorial defence hypothesis, when food resources are abundant, carnivore densities will be high and home ranges small. In addition, carnivores can maximise their necessary energy intake with minimal territorial defence. At medium resource levels, larger ranges will be needed, and it will become more economically beneficial to defend resources against a lower density of competitors. At low resource levels, carnivore densities will be low and home ranges large, but resources will be too scarce to make it beneficial to defend such large territories. Thus, home range overlap will be minimal at intermediate carnivore densities. According to the searching efficiency hypothesis, there is a cost to knowing a home range. Larger areas are harder to learn and easier to forget, so carnivores constantly need to keep their cognitive map updated by regularly revisiting parts of their home ranges. Consequently, when resources are scarce, carnivores require larger home ranges to acquire sufficient food. These larger home ranges lead to more overlap among individuals' ranges, so that overlap in home ranges is largest when food availability is the lowest. Since conspecific density is low when food availability is low, this hypothesis predicts that overlap is largest when densities are the lowest. We measured home range overlap and used a novel method to compare intraspecific home range overlaps for lions Panthera leo (n = 149) and leopards Panthera pardus (n = 111) in Africa. We estimated home range sizes from telemetry location data and gathered carnivore density data from the literature. Our results did not support the territorial defence hypothesis for either species. Lion prides increased their home range overlap at conspecific lower densities whereas leopards did
- Published
- 2023
5. Dispersal of brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) fry in a low gradient stream ‐ implications for egg stocking practices
- Author
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Palm, Daniel, primary, Losee, James, additional, Andersson, Susanna, additional, Hellström, Gustav, additional, Holmgren, Annika, additional, and Spong, Goran, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Large mammal telomere length variation across ecoregions
- Author
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Fohringer, Christian, Hoelzl, Franz, Allen, Andrew M., Cayol, Claire, Ericsson, Göran, Spong, Goran, Smith, Steven, Singh, Navinder J., Fohringer, Christian, Hoelzl, Franz, Allen, Andrew M., Cayol, Claire, Ericsson, Göran, Spong, Goran, Smith, Steven, and Singh, Navinder J.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 253547.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)
- Published
- 2022
7. Dispersal of brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) fry in a low gradient stream ‐ implications for egg stocking practices.
- Author
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Palm, Daniel, Losee, James, Andersson, Susanna, Hellström, Gustav, Holmgren, Annika, and Spong, Goran
- Subjects
LARVAL dispersal ,EGGS ,GROWING season ,BROWN trout ,FRYING ,RAINBOW trout - Abstract
Stocking of eggs is a common strategy to support declining or reintroduce extirpated salmonid populations. Data on how juveniles disperse from stocking points is crucial to be able to design efficient stocking programs. Detailed information of dispersal is limited for many salmonids, for example, brown trout. In this study, dispersal distance was measured at the end of the first growing season in a low gradient (0.7%) stream in Sweden where the trout population had been depleted. Eggs from 17 separate sets of parents were stocked as eyed eggs in March. During the following fall fry were sampled throughout the stream. The majority of the fry dispersed downstream and remained within a distance of 200 m from the stocking point with no difference between sizes of fry and the presence of a competing cohort or not. There was no dissimilarity in dispersal distances across offspring originating from different parents indicating absence of genetic influence. Our results suggest that, in streams similar to our study site, stocking points should be separated by approximately 330 m in order to avoid overlap in habitat use of fry from different stocking points and that the presence of competing cohorts, fry size and within population variability in dispersal can be neglected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Adaptive Suppression of Subordinate Reproduction in Cooperative Mammals
- Author
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Clutton‐Brock, Tim H., Hodge, Sarah J., Flower, Tom P., Spong, Goran F., and Young, Andrew J.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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9. Subordinate Male Meerkats Prospect for Extra-Group Paternity: Alternative Reproductive Tactics in a Cooperative Mammal
- Author
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Young, Andrew J., Spong, Goran, and Clutton-Brock, Tim
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Effects of Kinship on Territorial Conflicts among Groups of Lions, Panthera leo
- Author
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Spong, Goran and Creel, Scott
- Published
- 2004
11. A Near-extinction Event in Lynx : Do Microsatellite Data Tell the Tale?
- Author
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Spong, Goran and Hellborg, Linda
- Published
- 2002
12. African and Asian leopards are highly differentiated at the genomic level
- Author
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Paijmans, Johanna L. A., Barlow, Axel, Becker, Matthew S., Cahill, James A., Fickel, Joerns, Foerster, Daniel W. G., Gries, Katrin, Hartmann, Stefanie, Havmoller, Rasmus Worsoe, Henneberger, Kirstin, Kern, Christian, Kitchener, Andrew C., Lorenzen, Eline D., Mayer, Frieder, OBrien, Stephen J., von Seth, Johanna, Sinding, Mikkel-Holder S., Spong, Goran, Uphyrkina, Olga, Wachter, Bettina, Westbury, Michael, Dalen, Love, Bhak, Jong, Manica, Andrea, Hofreiter, Michael, Paijmans, Johanna L. A., Barlow, Axel, Becker, Matthew S., Cahill, James A., Fickel, Joerns, Foerster, Daniel W. G., Gries, Katrin, Hartmann, Stefanie, Havmoller, Rasmus Worsoe, Henneberger, Kirstin, Kern, Christian, Kitchener, Andrew C., Lorenzen, Eline D., Mayer, Frieder, OBrien, Stephen J., von Seth, Johanna, Sinding, Mikkel-Holder S., Spong, Goran, Uphyrkina, Olga, Wachter, Bettina, Westbury, Michael, Dalen, Love, Bhak, Jong, Manica, Andrea, and Hofreiter, Michael
- Abstract
Leopards are the only big cats still widely distributed across the continents of Africa and Asia. They occur in a wide range of habitats and are often found in close proximity to humans. But despite their ubiquity, leopard phylogeography and population history have not yet been studied with genomic tools. Here, we present population-genomic data from 26 modern and historical samples encompassing the vast geographical distribution of this species. We find that Asian leopards are broadly monophyletic with respect to African leopards across almost their entire nuclear genomes. This profound genetic pattern persists despite the animals' high potential mobility, and despite evidence of transfer of African alleles into Middle Eastern and Central Asian leopard populations within the last 100,000 years. Our results further suggest that Asian leopards originated from a single out-of-Africa dispersal event 500-600 thousand years ago and are characterized by higher population structuring, stronger isolation by distance, and lower heterozygosity than African leopards. Taxonomic categories do not take into account the variability in depth of divergence among subspecies. The deep divergence between the African subspecies and Asian populations contrasts with the much shallower divergence among putative Asian subspecies. Reconciling genomic variation and taxonomy is likely to be a growing challenge in the genomics era.
- Published
- 2021
13. De novo discovery of SNPs for genotyping endangered sun parakeets (Aratinga solstitialis) in Guyana
- Author
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Spitzer, Robert, Norman, Anita J., Konigsson, Helena, Schiffthaler, Bastian, Spong, Goran, Spitzer, Robert, Norman, Anita J., Konigsson, Helena, Schiffthaler, Bastian, and Spong, Goran
- Abstract
Parrots (Psittaciformes) are among the most endangered groups of birds today and remain threatened by habitat loss and exploitation for the live bird trade. Under such conditions, reliable and non-invasive monitoring techniques are crucial for successful conservation measures. In this study, we developed a panel of 86 high quality SNPs for genotyping endangered sun parakeets (Aratinga solstitialis) in Guyana, which form one of the last known breeding populations of this South American species in the wild. Genotyping was tested on different types of samples (blood, feathers, feces, beak and cloacal swabs). While blood performed best, feathers and feces also yielded reliable results and could thus be used as non-invasive sources of DNA for future population monitoring. Discriminant Analysis of Principal Components (DAPC) on genotypes revealed that Guyanese sun parakeets clustered separately from other psittacine species as well as conspecifics from a captive population. A priori known first-order kinships were also adequately detected by the SNP panel. Using a series of experimental contaminations, we found that contamination from other psittacine species and slight contamination ( 10%) from conspecifics did not prevent successful genotyping and recognition of individuals. We show that instances of higher conspecific contamination ( 50%) can be detected through an increased level of heterozygosity that falls outside the distribution of uncontaminated samples.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Performance of marker-based relatedness estimators in natural populations of outbred vertebrates
- Author
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Csillery, Katalin, Johnson, Toby, Beraldi, Dario, Clutton-Brock, Tim, Coltman, Dave, Hansson, Bengt, Spong, Goran, and Pemberton, Josephine M.
- Subjects
Population genetics -- Research ,Vertebrates -- Research ,Vertebrates -- Genetic aspects ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Knowledge of relatedness between pairs of individuals plays an important role in many research areas including evolutionary biology, quantitative genetics, and conservation. Pairwise relatedness estimation methods based on genetic data from highly variable molecular markers are now used extensively as a substitute for pedigrees. Although the sampling variance of the estimators has been intensively studied for the most common simple genetic relationships, such as unrelated, half- and full-sib, or parent--offspring, little attention has been paid to the average performance of the estimators, by which we mean the performance across all pairs of individuals in a sample. Here we apply two measures to quantify the average performance: first, misclassification rates between pairs of genetic relationships and, second, the proportion of variance explained in the pairwise relatedness estimates by the true population relatedness composition (i. e., the frequencies of different relationships in the population). Using simulated data derived from exceptionally good quality marker and pedigree data from five long-term projects of natural populations, we demonstrate that the average performance depends mainly on the population relatedness composition and may be improved by the marker data quality only within the limits of the population relatedness composition. Our five examples of vertebrate breeding systems suggest that due to the remarkably low variance in relatedness across the population, marker-based estimates may often have low power to address research questions of interest.
- Published
- 2006
15. Droplet digital PCR assays for the quantification of brown trout (Salmo trutta) and Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) from environmental DNA collected in the water of mountain lakes
- Author
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Capo, Eric, Spong, Goran, Norman, Sven, Königsson, Helena, Bartels, Pia, Byström, Pär, Capo, Eric, Spong, Goran, Norman, Sven, Königsson, Helena, Bartels, Pia, and Byström, Pär
- Abstract
Classical methods for estimating the abundance of fish populations are often both expensive, time-consuming and destructive. Analyses of the environmental DNA (eDNA) present in water samples could alleviate such constraints. Here, we developed protocols to detect and quantify brown trout (Salmo trutta) and Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus) populations by applying the droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) method to eDNA molecules extracted from water samples collected in 28 Swedish mountain lakes. Overall, contemporary fish CPUE (catch per unit effort) estimates from standardized survey gill nettings were not correlated to eDNA concentrations for either of the species. In addition, the measured environmental variables (e.g. dissolved organic carbon concentrations, temperature, and pH) appear to not influence water eDNA concentrations of the studied fish species. Detection probabilities via eDNA analysis showed moderate success (less than 70% for both species) while the presence of eDNA from Arctic char (in six lakes) and brown trout (in one lake) was also indicated in lakes where the species were not detected with the gillnetting method. Such findings highlight the limits of one or both methods to reliably detect fish species presence in natural systems. Additional analysis showed that the filtration of water samples through 1.2 mu m glass fiber filters and 0.45 mu m mixed cellulose ester filters was more efficient in recovering DNA than using 0.22 mu m enclosed polyethersulfone filters, probably due to differential efficiencies of DNA extraction. Altogether, this work showed the potentials and limits of the approach for the detection and the quantification of fish abundance in natural systems while providing new insights in the application of the ddPCR method applied to environmental DNA.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Sex ratio of leopards taken in trophy hunting: genetic data from Tanzania
- Author
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Spong, Goran, Hellborg, Linda, and Creel, Scott
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Landscape relatedness : detecting contemporary fine-scale spatial structure in wild populations
- Author
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Norman, Anita J., Stronen, Astrid V., Fuglstad, Geir-Arne, Ruiz-Gonzalez, Aritz, Kindberg, Jonas, Street, Nathaniel R., Spong, Goran, Norman, Anita J., Stronen, Astrid V., Fuglstad, Geir-Arne, Ruiz-Gonzalez, Aritz, Kindberg, Jonas, Street, Nathaniel R., and Spong, Goran
- Abstract
Methods for detecting contemporary, fine-scale population genetic structure in continuous populations are scarce. Yet such methods are vital for ecological and conservation studies, particularly under a changing landscape. Here we present a novel, spatially explicit method that we call landscape relatedness (LandRel). With this method, we aim to detect contemporary, fine-scale population structure that is sensitive to spatial and temporal changes in the landscape. We interpolate spatially determined relatedness values based on SNP genotypes across the landscape. Interpolations are calculated using the Bayesian inference approach integrated nested Laplace approximation. We empirically tested this method on a continuous population of brown bears (Ursus arctos) spanning two counties in Sweden. Two areas were identified as differentiated from the remaining population. Further analysis suggests that inbreeding has occurred in at least one of these areas. LandRel enabled us to identify previously unknown fine-scale structuring in the population. These results will help direct future research efforts, conservation action and aid in the management of the Scandinavian brown bear population. LandRel thus offers an approach for detecting subtle population structure with a focus on contemporary, fine-scale analysis of continuous populations.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. De Novo SNP Discovery in the Scandinavian Brown Bear (Ursus arctos)
- Author
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Norman, Anita J., Street, Nathaniel Robert, Spong, Goran, Norman, Anita J., Street, Nathaniel Robert, and Spong, Goran
- Abstract
Information about relatedness between individuals in wild populations is advantageous when studying evolutionary, behavioural and ecological processes. Genomic data can be used to determine relatedness between individuals either when no prior knowledge exists or to confirm suspected relatedness. Here we present a set of 96 SNPs suitable for inferring relatedness for brown bears (Ursus arctos) within Scandinavia. We sequenced reduced representation libraries from nine individuals throughout the geographic range. With consensus reads containing putative SNPs, we applied strict filtering criteria with the aim of finding only high-quality, highly-informative SNPs. We tested 150 putative SNPs of which 96% were validated on a panel of 68 individuals. Ninety-six of the validated SNPs with the highest minor allele frequency were selected. The final SNP panel includes four mitochondrial markers, two monomorphic Y-chromosome sex-determination markers, three X-chromosome SNPs and 87 autosomal SNPs. From our validation sample panel, we identified two previously known parent-offspring dyads with reasonable accuracy. This panel of SNPs is a promising tool for inferring relatedness in the brown bear population in Scandinavia.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Near-extinction Event in Lynx: Do Microsatellite Data Tell the Tale?
- Author
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Spong, Goran and Hellborg, Linda
- Subjects
lynx ,wildlife ,population studies - Abstract
"Fluctuations in population size can have a profound impact on effective population size and the maintenance of genetic variation within a population. A number of tests based on microsatellite data have been developed for the detection of bottleneck events in a population's past. In this paper, we search for signs of a bottleneck in microsatellite data on the Scandinavian lynx (Lynx lynx) population. This population was hunted to the brink of extinction, with fewer than 100 animals (one estimate was as low as 30 individuals) remaining in the late 1920s. Protection allowed recovery of the population, which currently numbers about 2000 adults. Despite this pronounced demographic bottleneck (more than 95% of the population was killed), we could find no conclusive genetic evidence of a bottleneck using four of the recently developed tests for detecting such events."
- Published
- 2002
20. Genetic Consequences of Dispersal and Social Behavior in Lions, Panthera leo
- Author
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Spong, Goran
- Subjects
inclusive fitness ,Developmental biology ,Behavioral ecology ,population genetics ,Utvecklingsbiologi ,sociality ,dispersal ,Panthera leo ,direct fitness - Abstract
This thesis combines behavioral observations of African lions (Panthera leo) with genetic analyses, in an attempt to clarify causes and consequences of lion group living. The numerous complex cooperative behaviors of lions present an excellent opportunity to investigate the evolution and maintenance of group living. This thesis focuses on female group living and male dispersal patterns. Lion sociality is found to be more complex than previously thought. Short dispersal distances result in strong kinship ties among prides, creating the potential for kin selection to operate among prides. Simultaneously, some prides contained unrelated females, depriving females in such prides of inclusive fitness benefits from group living. Concurrent with short dispersal distances in both males and females, significant genetic differentiation could be detected over relatively short distances in analyses of males. Extensive behavioral observations showed that territorial behaviors were unaffected by kinship ties to intruders. Instead, favorable odds and several environmental conditions were important factors. Space use analyses showed large overlap among prides. Again, kinship did not affect degree of overlap. Conclusively, these results show that the ultimate causes of lion sociality remain elusive, but that kin selection may be less important than generally thought. Lion sociality seems to be explicable mainly in terms of direct fitness benefits, which therefore should be given more attention.
- Published
- 2001
21. The impact of founder events and introductions on genetic variation in the muskox Ovibos moschatus in Sweden
- Author
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Thulin, Carl-Gustaf, Englund, Linda, Ericsson, Goran, Spong, Goran, Thulin, Carl-Gustaf, Englund, Linda, Ericsson, Goran, and Spong, Goran
- Abstract
The muskox Ovibos moschatus (Zimmerman 1780) is a specialised arctic mammal with a highly fragmented circumpolar distribution, with native populations in Canada and east Greenland and introduced populations in west Greenland, Alaska, Siberia and Eurasia. In 1971, five O. moschatus individuals from an introduced population in Norway migrated to Sweden. After a peak population of 36 individuals in the mid-1980s, the Swedish population now numbers seven individuals, making it vulnerable to both demographic and genetic stochasticity (i.e. inbreeding). Here, we analyse genetic variation among native and introduced populations of O. moschatus to evaluate the genetic effect of sequential founder events in this species. Our results show that genetic variation among native and introduced O. moschatus populations do not conform entirely to the expectations from sequential founder events, most likely because of random processes associated with introduction. In the Swedish population, a calf resulting from the mating of a wild cow and a captive Greenlandic bull contributes significantly to the current genetic variation. Thus, even a single outbreeding event may, at least momentarily, increase the genetic variation and potentially prevent inbreeding depression. Our results should aid the long-term preservation of O. moschatus in Sweden and Europe.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Population size estimation in Yellowstone wolves with error‐prone noninvasive microsatellite genotypes
- Author
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Creel, Scott, primary, Spong, Goran, additional, Sands, Jennifer L., additional, Rotella, Jay, additional, Zeigle, Janet, additional, Joe, Lawrence, additional, Murphy, Kerry M., additional, and Smith, Douglas, additional
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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