Abstract

Island ecosystems are globally threatened, and efforts to restore historical communities are widespread. Such conservation efforts should be informed by accurate assessments of historical community composition to establish appropriate restoration targets. Isle Royale National Park is one of the most researched island ecosystems in the world, yet little is actually known about the biogeographic history of most Isle Royale taxa. To address this uncertainty and inform restoration targets, we determined the phylogeographic history of American martens (Martes americana), a species rediscovered on Isle Royale 76 years after presumed extirpation. We characterized the genetic composition of martens throughout the Great Lakes region using nuclear and mitochondrial markers, identified the source of Isle Royale martens using genetic structure analyses, and used demographic bottleneck tests to evaluate (eliminate redundancy of test). 3 competing colonization scenarios. Martens exhibited significant structure regionally, including a distinct Isle Royale cluster, but mitochondrial sequences revealed no monophyletic clades or evolutionarily significant units. Rather, martens were historically extirpated and recolonized Isle Royale from neighbouring Ontario, Canada in the late 20th century. These findings illustrate the underappreciated dynamics of island communities, underscore the importance of historical biogeography for establishing restoration baselines, and provide optimism for extirpated and declining Isle Royale vertebrates whose reintroductions have been widely debated.

Highlights

  • Island ecosystems are globally threatened, and efforts to restore historical communities are widespread

  • We explored the phylogenetic history of martens on Isle Royale using nuclear and mitochondrial DNA from biological samples collected across the Lake Superior basin

  • Our study revealed an unexpected and dynamic pattern of extinction and recolonization for a small-bodied carnivore and illustrates that even federally protected or historically pristine ecosystems have experienced more community turnover than previously appreciated

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Summary

Introduction

Island ecosystems are globally threatened, and efforts to restore historical communities are widespread. Isle Royale National Park is one of the most researched island ecosystems in the world, yet little is known about the biogeographic history of most Isle Royale taxa To address this uncertainty and inform restoration targets, we determined the phylogeographic history of American martens (Martes americana), a species rediscovered on Isle Royale 76 years after presumed extirpation. Recent declines in wolf abundance have sparked widespread discussions on conservation ethics, wilderness management, and the restoration of island communities[20,24,25] Despite this attention, little is known about the 17 other mammals that inhabit Isle Royale, and widespread species turnover throughout the 20th century has obscured historical community composition[26]. The management of Lake Superior martens, and Isle Royale in particular, is likely complicated by an amalgam of local and introduced lineages throughout the region

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