Abstract

The effective population size (Ne) is proportional to the loss of genetic diversity and the rate of inbreeding, and its accurate estimation is crucial for the monitoring of small populations. Here, we integrate temporal studies of the gecko Oedura reticulata, to compare genetic and demographic estimators of Ne. Because geckos have overlapping generations, our goal was to demographically estimate NbI, the inbreeding effective number of breeders and to calculate the NbI/Na ratio (Na = number of adults) for four populations. Demographically estimated NbI ranged from 1 to 65 individuals. The mean reduction in the effective number of breeders relative to census size (NbI/Na) was 0.1 to 1.1. We identified the variance in reproductive success as the most important variable contributing to reduction of this ratio. We used four methods to estimate the genetic based inbreeding effective number of breeders NbI(gen) and the variance effective populations size NeV(gen) estimates from the genotype data. Two of these methods - a temporal moment-based (MBT) and a likelihood-based approach (TM3) require at least two samples in time, while the other two were single-sample estimators - the linkage disequilibrium method with bias correction LDNe and the program ONeSAMP. The genetic based estimates were fairly similar across methods and also similar to the demographic estimates excluding those estimates, in which upper confidence interval boundaries were uninformative. For example, LDNe and ONeSAMP estimates ranged from 14–55 and 24–48 individuals, respectively. However, temporal methods suffered from a large variation in confidence intervals and concerns about the prior information. We conclude that the single-sample estimators are an acceptable short-cut to estimate NbI for species such as geckos and will be of great importance for the monitoring of species in fragmented landscapes.

Highlights

  • The effective population size (Ne), which is inversely related to the rate of loss of genetic diversity through genetic drift and inbreeding [1], is one of the most essential parameter in population genetics, evolutionary ecology, and conservation biology [2,3,4,5,6,7]

  • Adult Population Size Na We observed a significant increase in the size of two populations of O. reticulata over the ten years period (Table 1, Figure 2) while the remaining two populations remained more or less stable

  • - performed best among the genetic estimators of effective population size evaluated in this study, when considering confidence intervals and plausibility in relation to known population sizes

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Summary

Introduction

The effective population size (Ne), which is inversely related to the rate of loss of genetic diversity through genetic drift and inbreeding [1], is one of the most essential parameter in population genetics, evolutionary ecology, and conservation biology [2,3,4,5,6,7]. Effective population sizes have been estimated using both genetic and demographic approaches, but only rarely in combination [10,13,14]. This is because it has been extremely difficult to estimate demographic effective population size Ne(demo) in natural populations. Recent developments in theory and in analytical tools have simplified the analysis of demographic parameters and made possible more robust estimation of Ne(demo) [2,3,15,16,17,18,19]

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