Abstract

BackgroundFemale lions generally do not disperse far beyond their natal range, while males can disperse distances of over 200 km. However, in bush-like ecosystems dispersal distances less than 25 km are reported. Here, we investigate dispersal in lions sampled from the northern and southern extremes of Kruger National Park, a bush-like ecosystem in South Africa where bovine tuberculosis prevalence ranges from low to high across a north-south gradient.ResultsA total of 109 individuals sampled from 1998 to 2004 were typed using 11 microsatellite markers, and mitochondrial RS-3 gene sequences were generated for 28 of these individuals. Considerable north-south genetic differentiation was observed in both datasets. Dispersal was male-biased and generally further than 25 km, with long-distance male gene flow (75–200 km, detected for two individuals) confirming that male lions can travel large distances, even in bush-like ecosystems. In contrast, females generally did not disperse further than 20 km, with two distinctive RS-3 gene clusters for northern and southern females indicating no or rare long-distance female dispersal. However, dispersal rate for the predominantly non-territorial females from southern Kruger (fraction dispersers ≥0.68) was higher than previously reported. Of relevance was the below-average body condition of dispersers and their low presence in prides, suggesting low fitness.ConclusionsLarge genetic differences between the two sampling localities, and low relatedness among males and high dispersal rates among females in the south, suggestive of unstable territory structure and high pride turnover, have potential implications for spread of diseases and the management of the Kruger lion population.

Highlights

  • Female lions generally do not disperse far beyond their natal range, while males can disperse distances of over 200 km

  • We explored whether there was a difference in dispersal characteristics between the two sampled subpopulations which differed with respect to density, adult sex ratio, territory size, body condition and bovine tuberculosis (BTB) prevalence

  • We evaluated four hypotheses: 1) dispersal distances are short for both males and females (< 25 km) in bush-like ecosystems [18, 22, 27], 2) the fraction of dispersing males is small (≤ 20%) [22], 3) the fraction of dispersers increases with age peaking at around 40 months of age; the observed onset of male dispersal in southern Kruger [22], and 4) fitness among dispersers is relatively low; indicated by low body condition and high mortality [19, 22,23,24]

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Summary

Introduction

Female lions generally do not disperse far beyond their natal range, while males can disperse distances of over 200 km. The Kruger lion population fluctuates at around 1700 individuals and seems to have remained stable over a period of at least 30 years [8], it van Hooft et al BMC Genetics (2018) 19:21 may have decreased somewhat since 2005 [9]. Wildlife diseases, such as foot and mouth disease, anthrax, rift valley fever, brucellosis, feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) and bovine tuberculosis (BTB) which occur in Kruger, are likely influenced by predator-prey interactions and animal dispersal [8, 10,11,12]. FIV is endemic in the Kruger lion population with FIV-positivity being significantly related to sex (males more likely to be FIV-positive), advanced age and low body condition [11]

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