Abstract

The ratio of the effective number of breeders (N b) to the adult census size (N a), N b/N a, approximates the departure from the standard capacity of a population to maintain genetic diversity in one reproductive season. This information is relevant for assessing population status, understanding evolutionary processes operating at local scales, and unraveling how life‐history traits affect these processes. However, our knowledge on N b/N a ratios in nature is limited because estimation of both parameters is challenging. The sibship frequency (SF) method is adequate for reliable N b estimation because it is based on sibship and parentage reconstruction from genetic marker data, thereby providing demographic inferences that can be compared with field‐based information. In addition, capture–mark–recapture (CMR) robust design methods are well suited for N a estimation in seasonal‐breeding species. We used tadpole genotypes of three pond‐breeding amphibian species (Epidalea calamita, Hyla molleri, and Pelophylax perezi, n = 73–96 single‐cohort tadpoles/species genotyped at 15–17 microsatellite loci) and candidate parental genotypes (n = 94–300 adults/species) to estimate N b by the SF method. To assess the reliability of N b estimates, we compared sibship and parentage inferences with field‐based information and checked for the convergence of results in replicated subsampled analyses. Finally, we used CMR data from a 6‐year monitoring program to estimate annual N a in the three species and calculate the N b/N a ratio. Reliable ratios were obtained for E. calamita (N b/N a = 0.18–0.28) and P. perezi (0.5), but in H. molleri, N a could not be estimated and genetic information proved insufficient for reliable N b estimation. Integrative demographic studies taking full advantage of SF and CMR methods can provide accurate estimates of the N b/N a ratio in seasonal‐breeding species. Importantly, the SF method provides results that can be readily evaluated for reliability. This represents a good opportunity for obtaining robust demographic inferences with wide applications for evolutionary and conservation research.

Highlights

  • The effective size and the census size of a population are two conceptually different demographic parameters

  • Counts of egg strings of E. calamita provided a minimum estimate for the number of successfully mating females in the years of tadpole sampling (46 in 2013 and 104 in 2015) that very closely matched the number of potential breeding females estimated by the CMR method (43 in 2013 and 125 in 2015, see Table 1)

  • These results are concordant with a female mating success close to one in our population, and support the hypothesis that counts of egg strings are a good surrogate for the number of breeding females

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

The effective size and the census size of a population are two conceptually different demographic parameters. Demographic approaches integrating SF estimation of Nb and CMR estimation of Na provide a good opportunity for producing reliable Nb/Na ratios for seasonal-breeding species, such as pond-breeding amphibians of temperate latitudes We implemented such an integrative study, combining field-­based information with genotype data from newly optimized sets of microsatellite markers to monitor a breeding assemblage of three sympatric anuran species differing in their life-­history traits: the natterjack toad Epidalea calamita (Laurenti, 1768); the Iberian treefrog Hyla molleri Bedriaga, 1889; and Perez’s frog Pelophylax perezi (López-­Seoane, 1885).

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
DATA ACCESSIBILITY
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