Abstract

The analysis of 25 allozyme loci in up to 469 Common Buzzards (B. b. buteo) from five locations in Germany revealed allelic polymorphism at twelve loci, but a prevalence of rare alleles resulted in a very low heterozygosity of Ho=0.0057. This rather low level of genetic variation characterizes a most abundant raptor species with highly polymorphic plumage pigmentation. The results of monitoring 571 buzzard breeding pairs from the Hakel forest (Sachsen-Anhalt) over 27 years indicate that neither the among-pair fertility variance, which slightly increased the genetically effective population size against the numerical size, nor the yearwise fluctuation of the breeder numbers, nor other population ecological characters were likely to erode the genetic variation of the numerically large buzzard population. One or repeated phyletic or historical bottle-necks are postulated to have diminished the allozyme variability, and at the same time to have created new genetic variance of the pigment-coding genes from non-additive components of genetic variance. Thus, the plumage colour diversity of the Common Buzzard could be a direct result of diminished single-locus genetic variation.

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