Abstract

In the first continent-wide study of the golden jackal (Canis aureus), we characterised its population genetic structure and attempted to identify the origin of European populations. This provided a unique insight into genetic characteristics of a native carnivore population with rapid large-scale expansion. We analysed 15 microsatellite markers and a 406 base-pair fragment of the mitochondrial control region. Bayesian-based and principal components methods were applied to evaluate whether the geographical grouping of samples corresponded with genetic groups. Our analysis revealed low levels of genetic diversity, reflecting the unique history of the golden jackal among Europe’s native carnivores. The results suggest ongoing gene flow between south-eastern Europe and the Caucasus, with both contributing to the Baltic population, which appeared only recently. The population from the Peloponnese Peninsula in southern Greece forms a common genetic cluster with samples from south-eastern Europe (ΔK approach in STRUCTURE, Principal Components Analysis [PCA]), although the results based on BAPS and the estimated likelihood in STRUCTURE indicate that Peloponnesian jackals may represent a distinct population. Moreover, analyses of population structure also suggest either genetic distinctiveness of the island population from Samos near the coast of Asia Minor (BAPS, most STRUCTURE, PCA), or possibly its connection with the Caucasus population (one analysis in STRUCTURE). We speculate from our results that ancient Mediterranean jackal populations have persisted to the present day, and have merged with jackals colonising from Asia. These data also suggest that new populations of the golden jackal may be founded by long-distance dispersal, and thus should not be treated as an invasive alien species, i.e. an organism that is “non-native to an ecosystem, and which may cause economic or environmental harm or adversely affect human health”. These insights into the genetic structure and ancestry of Baltic jackals have important implications for management and conservation of jackals in Europe. The golden jackal is listed as an Annex V species in the EU Habitats Directive and as such, considering also the results presented here, should be legally protected in all EU member states.

Highlights

  • An implementation of molecular techniques to study population genetics has broadened our knowledge about several aspects of wildlife biology and ecology, including breeding characteristics [1, 2], population connectivity, and dispersal [3, 4]

  • Comparing haplotypes identified in this study with those deposited in GenBank, we found that H1 corresponds with a haplotype identified previously in Italy, Croatia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Ukraine, NW Poland, and the Caucasus, while differing by just a single mutation from another haplotype from the south-eastern Europe (SEE) CAU BAL GRE-P GRE-S

  • In the Serbian population the total observed heterozygosity was 0.28, compared with the 0.52 found in our study. These differences can be explained by the fact that the populations of golden jackals analysed in this study were historically older and larger than those from Serbia, or involved samples from across a larger area, with the SEE geographical group encompassing individuals from a large part of south-eastern, Central and Eastern Europe

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Summary

Introduction

An implementation of molecular techniques to study population genetics has broadened our knowledge about several aspects of wildlife biology and ecology, including breeding characteristics [1, 2], population connectivity, and dispersal [3, 4]. Changes in the geographical range are recognized as natural processes and have occurred in the history of most species [20,21,22,23]. Theoretical aspects of genetic after-effects of range shifts have been thoroughly analysed It was shown that range expansions may lead to changes in population genetic structure and diversity. The genetic consequences of natural, contemporary range expansions have begun to be investigated only very recently [27,28,29,30,31] and results so far are equivocal and not always concordant with theoretical expectations

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