Abstract

Population genetic structure has important consequences in evolutionary processes and conservation genetics in animals. Fine-scale population genetic structure depends on the pattern of landscape, the permanent movement of individuals, and the dispersal of their genes during temporary mating events. The lesser flat-headed bat (Tylonycteris pachypus) is a nonmigratory Asian bat species that roosts in small groups within the internodes of bamboo stems and the habitats are fragmented. Our previous parentage analyses revealed considerable extra-group mating in this species. To assess the spatial limits and sex-biased nature of gene flow in the same population, we used 20 microsatellite loci and mtDNA sequencing of the ND2 gene to quantify genetic structure among 54 groups of adult flat-headed bats, at nine localities in South China. AMOVA and F ST estimates revealed significant genetic differentiation among localities. Alternatively, the pairwise F ST values among roosting groups appeared to be related to the incidence of associated extra-group breeding, suggesting the impact of mating events on fine-scale genetic structure. Global spatial autocorrelation analyses showed positive genetic correlation for up to 3 km, indicating the role of fragmented habitat and the specialized social organization as a barrier in the movement of individuals among bamboo forests. The male-biased dispersal pattern resulted in weaker spatial genetic structure between localities among males than among females, and fine-scale analyses supported that relatedness levels within internodes were higher among females than among males. Finally, only females were more related to their same sex roost mates than to individuals from neighbouring roosts, suggestive of natal philopatry in females.

Highlights

  • Numerous studies of wild animal populations have revealed the importance of behavioral and ecological traits in shaping population genetic structure [1,2]

  • We detected a total of 279 alleles, ranging from three to 21 alleles per locus at the 20 microsatellite loci scored

  • High genetic variation within localities was detected in terms of both observed heterozygosity (HO: 0.668 to 0.770) and expected heterozygosity (HE: 0.658 to 0.786, supplementary information, Table S1)

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Summary

Introduction

Numerous studies of wild animal populations have revealed the importance of behavioral and ecological traits in shaping population genetic structure [1,2]. Nonrandom mating and dispersal often result in fine-scale genetic structure in natural populations [3]. Natal dispersal is male-biased, whereas females tend to be more philopatric [4]. Levels of population structure among adult males are often weaker than among females [5]. Genetic mixing among populations or groups can be further increased when individuals undergo temporary movements for the explicit purpose of mating, where these involve individuals from different natal populations [6]. It follows that contrary to classic population models, gene flow in natural systems is neither random nor necessarily a function of distance, but rather can reflect the underlying adaptive mating strategies of individuals [7]

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