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Corridor‐based approach with spatial cross‐validation reveals scale‐dependent effects of geographic distance, human footprint and canopy cover on grizzly bear genetic connectivity.

Authors :
Palm, Eric C.
Landguth, Erin L.
Holden, Zachary A.
Day, Casey C.
Lamb, Clayton T.
Frame, Paul F.
Morehouse, Andrea T.
Mowat, Garth
Proctor, Michael F.
Sawaya, Michael A.
Stenhouse, Gordon
Whittington, Jesse
Zeller, Katherine A.
Source :
Molecular Ecology. Oct2023, Vol. 32 Issue 19, p5211-5227. 17p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Understanding how human infrastructure and other landscape attributes affect genetic differentiation in animals is an important step for identifying and maintaining dispersal corridors for these species. We built upon recent advances in the field of landscape genetics by using an individual‐based and multiscale approach to predict landscape‐level genetic connectivity for grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) across ~100,000 km2 in Canada's southern Rocky Mountains. We used a genetic dataset with 1156 unique individuals genotyped at nine microsatellite loci to identify landscape characteristics that influence grizzly bear gene flow at multiple spatial scales and map predicted genetic connectivity through a matrix of rugged terrain, large protected areas, highways and a growing human footprint. Our corridor‐based modelling approach used a machine learning algorithm that objectively parameterized landscape resistance, incorporated spatial cross validation and variable selection and explicitly accounted for isolation by distance. This approach avoided overfitting, discarded variables that did not improve model performance across withheld test datasets and spatial predictive capacity compared to random cross‐validation. We found that across all spatial scales, geographic distance explained more variation in genetic differentiation in grizzly bears than landscape variables. Human footprint inhibited connectivity across all spatial scales, while open canopies inhibited connectivity at the broadest spatial scale. Our results highlight the negative effect of human footprint on genetic connectivity, provide strong evidence for using spatial cross‐validation in landscape genetics analyses and show that multiscale analyses provide additional information on how landscape variables affect genetic differentiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09621083
Volume :
32
Issue :
19
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular Ecology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172346053
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.17098