Abstract

Dispersal is a key process for the maintenance of intraspecific genetic diversity by ensuring gene flow within and between populations. Despite the ongoing expansion of large carnivores in Europe, lynx populations remain fragmented, isolated, and threatened by inbreeding and loss of genetic diversity. In the course of large carnivore monitoring in the Czech Republic, several biological samples of Eurasian lynx were collected outside the permanent occurrence of this species. Using microsatellite genotyping we identified these as four dispersing lynx males and applied multiple methods (Bayesian clustering in STRUCTURE, Principal Component Analysis (PCA), frequency-based method in GENECLASS2, and machine-learning framework in assignPOP) to assign them to possible source populations. For this we used genotypes from five European lynx populations: the Bohemian-Bavarian-Austrian (N = 36), Carpathian (N = 43), Scandinavian (N = 20), Baltic (N = 15), and Harz (N = 23) population. All four dispersers were successfully assigned to different source populations within Europe and each was recorded at a distance of more than 98 km from the edge of the distribution of the source population identified. Such movements are among the longest described for lynx in Central Europe to this point. The findings indicate the ability of lynx males to disperse in human-dominated landscape thus facilitation of these movements via creation and/or protection of potential migratory corridors together with protection of dispersing individuals should be of high importance in conservation of this iconic predator in Central Europe.

Highlights

  • Dispersal has been recognised as a key process in the dynamics and evolution of natural populations

  • Through the redistribution of individuals, dispersal is the main factor leading to gene flow within and between populations and maintenance of genetic diversity (Bullock et al 2002; Clobert et al 2012)

  • Structure of two clusters was in concordance with delineation of two lynx subspecies: the Northern lynx (Lynx lynx lynx) and the Carpathian lynx (Lynx lynx carpathicus)

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Summary

Introduction

Dispersal has been recognised as a key process in the dynamics and evolution of natural populations. Through the redistribution of individuals, dispersal is the main factor leading to gene flow within and between populations and maintenance of genetic diversity (Bullock et al 2002; Clobert et al 2012). Species with low densities but extensive home-ranges, such as large carnivores, are substantially vulnerable to anthropogenic changes in the landscape. A human-dominated landscape may pose a serious obstacle in particular for long-distance dispersers, reducing the frequency of such dispersal movements. That said, these long-distance dispersal events may often remain undetected, as they are difficult to record, in elusive species (Trakhtenbrot et al 2005)

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