Abstract

BackgroundHuman activities, such as agriculture, hunting, and habitat modification, exert a significant effect on native species. Although many species have suffered population declines, increased population fragmentation, or even extinction in connection with these human impacts, others seem to have benefitted from human modification of their habitat. Here we examine whether population growth in an insectivorous bat (Tadarida brasiliensis mexicana) can be attributed to the widespread expansion of agriculture in North America following European settlement. Colonies of T. b. mexicana are extremely large (~106 individuals) and, in the modern era, major agricultural insect pests form an important component of their food resource. It is thus hypothesized that the growth of these insectivorous bat populations was coupled to the expansion of agricultural land use in North America over the last few centuries.ResultsWe sequenced one haploid and one autosomal locus to determine the rate and time of onset of population growth in T. b. mexicana. Using an approximate Maximum Likelihood method, we have determined that T. b. mexicana populations began to grow ~220 kya from a relatively small ancestral effective population size before reaching the large effective population size observed today.ConclusionsOur analyses reject the hypothesis that T. b. mexicana populations grew in connection with the expansion of human agriculture in North America, and instead suggest that this growth commenced long before the arrival of humans. As T. brasiliensis is a subtropical species, we hypothesize that the observed signals of population growth may instead reflect range expansions of ancestral bat populations from southern glacial refugia during the tail end of the Pleistocene.

Highlights

  • Human activities, such as agriculture, hunting, and habitat modification, exert a significant effect on native species

  • Genetic diversity is high for the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) locus, whereas diversity for the Recombination Activating Gene 2 (RAG2) gene is an order of magnitude lower

  • Singleton polymorphisms - a signal of population growth - are frequent in both datasets, accounting for 40% of all polymorphisms in the mtDNA control region and 32% of all polymorphisms in the RAG2 locus

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Summary

Introduction

Human activities, such as agriculture, hunting, and habitat modification, exert a significant effect on native species. We examine whether population growth in an insectivorous bat (Tadarida brasiliensis mexicana) can be attributed to the widespread expansion of agriculture in North America following European settlement. The effect of human activities on native species is not predictable, and in some instances human activities have benefited native wildlife, often through increasing habitat or Roosting colonies of Mexican free-tailed bats (Tadarida brasiliensis mexicana) are some of the largest and most conspicuous aggregations of bats in North America. During the energetically demanding period of pregnancy and lactation, females ingest up to two-thirds of their body weight in insects every night [14] These colonies depend upon a large and reliable base of insect prey to maintain their considerable population sizes

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