Abstract

Following severe population decline and local extinction due to massive habitat destruction and persecution, wildcats have recently reappeared in several parts of Germany’s low mountain region. It remains unknown how this reemergence occurred, specifically if local populations have been overlooked at low densities or if the species has successfully spread across the highly fragmented anthropogenic landscape. In the central German Rhön Mountains, for instance, wildcats were believed to be extinct during most of the twentieth century, however, the species was recently detected and subsequent genetic monitoring found the presence of a sizeable population. In this study, we used microsatellite and SNP genotypes from 146 wildcat individuals from 2008 to 2017 across a ~ 15,000 km2 area in the central German low mountain region to understand the population re-establishment of wildcats in the region. Bayesian clustering and subsequent analyses revealed that animals in the Rhön Mountains appear to be a mix from the two adjacent populations in the North and South of the area, suggesting a recent range expansion from two different directions. Both populations meet in the Rhön Biosphere Reserve, leading to an admixture of the northern, autochthonous, and the southern reintroduced wildcat population. While we cannot completely exclude the possibility of undetected population persistence, the high genetic homogeneity in the central German wildcat population and the lack of any signatures of past population decline in the Rhön favor a scenario of natural expansion. Our findings thus suggest that wildcats are well capable of rapid range expansion across richly structured landscape mosaics consisting of open land, settlements, and forest patches and document the potential of massive non-invasive genetic sampling when aiming to reconstruct the complex population and range dynamics of wildlife.

Highlights

  • Many populations of large- and medium-sized carnivores are currently re-expanding their ranges across the densely

  • Analysis of genetic structure based on combined SNP and microsatellite genotypes revealed no evidence of isolation by distance (IBD; Mantel test: r = 0.011, p = 0.48)

  • While the recolonization process has been well documented (Canters et al 2005; Nussberger et al 2018; Streif et al 2017), few attempts have been made to distinguish between active range expansion and locally growing populations

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Summary

Objectives

We aim to disentangle the above-mentioned recolonization scenarios by investigating the fine-scale genetic population structure of wildcats in a region where the species was recently detected, namely the Rhön Biosphere Reserve (RBR)

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