Abstract

Habitat fragmentation is a major extinction driver. Despite dramatically increasing fragmentation across the globe, its specific impacts on population connectivity across species with differing life histories remain difficult to characterize, let alone quantify. Here, we investigate patterns of population connectivity in six songbird species from Singapore, a highly fragmented tropical rainforest island. Using massive panels of genome‐wide single nucleotide polymorphisms across dozens of samples per species, we examined population genetic diversity, inbreeding, gene flow and connectivity among species along a spectrum of ecological specificities. We found a higher resilience to habitat fragmentation in edge‐tolerant and forest‐canopy species as compared to forest‐dependent understorey insectivores. The latter exhibited levels of genetic diversity up to three times lower in Singapore than in populations from contiguous forest elsewhere. Using dense genomic and geographic sampling, we identified individual barriers such as reservoirs that effectively minimize gene flow in sensitive understorey birds, revealing that terrestrial forest species may exhibit levels of sensitivity to fragmentation far greater than previously expected. This study provides a blueprint for conservation genomics at small scales with a view to identifying preferred locations for habitat corridors, flagging candidate populations for restocking with translocated individuals and improving the design of future reserves.

Highlights

  • Habitat fragmentation is amongst the main drivers of species extinction (Hughes, 2017)

  • We examined patterns of gene flow and connectivity across subpopulations of six passerine birds in a heavily fragmented forest landscape on the densely urbanized island of Singapore

  • Using thousands of genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in combination with multiple population-genomic approaches, we investigated how life history and ecological requirements affect a species’ response to fragmentation on a heavily urbanized tropical rainforest island

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Habitat fragmentation is amongst the main drivers of species extinction (Hughes, 2017). Some individuals may be able to occasionally cross barriers, the level of gene flow among populations might still be limited (Proctor, McLellan, Strobeck, & Barclay, 2005) Molecular techniques such as next-generation sequencing, which has recently been used to reveal fine-scale population structure (Kjeldsen et al, 2016; Szulkin, Gagnaire, Bierne, & Charmantier, 2016), offer new promise in investigating the influence of fragmentation and barriers on population connectivity (Angeloni, Wagemaker, Vergeer, & Ouborg, 2012; Sawaya, Kalinowski, & Clevenger, 2014) at ever-finer geographic scales. Using thousands of genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in combination with multiple population-genomic approaches, we investigated how life history and ecological requirements affect a species’ response to fragmentation on a heavily urbanized tropical rainforest island

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Findings
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