Natural and Anthropogenic Influences on the Adaptive Potential of Large Mammal Isolated Populations.

Large mammals are charismatic species that have always interacted with humans. Many of these interactions deserve active management that should consider ongoing evolutionary processes including man-mediated selection and local adaptation. The wild boar (Sus scrofa) and the wolf (Canis lupus) are two...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: FABBRI, Giulia
Other Authors: Fabbri, Giulia, SCANDURA, Massimo
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Università degli studi di Sassari 2023
Subjects:
SNP
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11388/312291
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spelling ftsassariuniiris:oai:iris.uniss.it:11388/312291 2024-02-11T10:02:49+01:00 Natural and Anthropogenic Influences on the Adaptive Potential of Large Mammal Isolated Populations. FABBRI, Giulia Fabbri, Giulia SCANDURA, Massimo 2023-07-10T00:00:00+02:00 https://hdl.handle.net/11388/312291 eng eng Università degli studi di Sassari https://hdl.handle.net/11388/312291 info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Sus scrofa Canis lupu SNP hybridization local adaptation Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis 2023 ftsassariuniiris 2024-01-17T17:36:38Z Large mammals are charismatic species that have always interacted with humans. Many of these interactions deserve active management that should consider ongoing evolutionary processes including man-mediated selection and local adaptation. The wild boar (Sus scrofa) and the wolf (Canis lupus) are two widespread, emblematic species of managerial interest. Sardinian and peninsular Italian wild boars were differentiated from other European populations. The heterogeneity of past population histories and management approaches was mirrored by a variegated situation across the Italian peninsula. Signs of translocations from other European countries were negligible, while internal translocations possibly involving one of the best-preserved Italian populations as source were found. The evolution of the wild boar in Corsica and Sardinia, which led to the subspecies S. s. meridionalis, appeared to be the result of adaptations developed on the islands, with signs of selection at elements possibly implied in the regulation of gene expression. Focusing on the Sardinian wild boar, the genetic differentiation can be partially attributed to differences in temperature and precipitation regime across the island. Moreover, domestic introgression was not detected in several samples, but evidence of adaptive introgression at genomic regions of swine origin with a role in reproductive success emerged. The positive influence on the fitness of wild populations due to introgression from the domestic counterpart was demonstrated in the Italian wolf too: the spread of a dog-derived allele at a β-defensine gene appeared to be governed by trade-offs between survival and reproductive success. This thesis demonstrates, with a population genomics approach, that even long-lived species like the two large mammals considered can adapt to the local environmental conditions in short evolutionary time-frames and that different kinds of anthropic interference could have modified their evolutionary trajectories Large mammals are charismatic species ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Canis lupus CINECA IRIS Universitá Degli Studi di Sassari
institution Open Polar
collection CINECA IRIS Universitá Degli Studi di Sassari
op_collection_id ftsassariuniiris
language English
topic Sus scrofa
Canis lupu
SNP
hybridization
local adaptation
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
spellingShingle Sus scrofa
Canis lupu
SNP
hybridization
local adaptation
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
FABBRI, Giulia
Natural and Anthropogenic Influences on the Adaptive Potential of Large Mammal Isolated Populations.
topic_facet Sus scrofa
Canis lupu
SNP
hybridization
local adaptation
Settore BIO/05 - Zoologia
description Large mammals are charismatic species that have always interacted with humans. Many of these interactions deserve active management that should consider ongoing evolutionary processes including man-mediated selection and local adaptation. The wild boar (Sus scrofa) and the wolf (Canis lupus) are two widespread, emblematic species of managerial interest. Sardinian and peninsular Italian wild boars were differentiated from other European populations. The heterogeneity of past population histories and management approaches was mirrored by a variegated situation across the Italian peninsula. Signs of translocations from other European countries were negligible, while internal translocations possibly involving one of the best-preserved Italian populations as source were found. The evolution of the wild boar in Corsica and Sardinia, which led to the subspecies S. s. meridionalis, appeared to be the result of adaptations developed on the islands, with signs of selection at elements possibly implied in the regulation of gene expression. Focusing on the Sardinian wild boar, the genetic differentiation can be partially attributed to differences in temperature and precipitation regime across the island. Moreover, domestic introgression was not detected in several samples, but evidence of adaptive introgression at genomic regions of swine origin with a role in reproductive success emerged. The positive influence on the fitness of wild populations due to introgression from the domestic counterpart was demonstrated in the Italian wolf too: the spread of a dog-derived allele at a β-defensine gene appeared to be governed by trade-offs between survival and reproductive success. This thesis demonstrates, with a population genomics approach, that even long-lived species like the two large mammals considered can adapt to the local environmental conditions in short evolutionary time-frames and that different kinds of anthropic interference could have modified their evolutionary trajectories Large mammals are charismatic species ...
author2 Fabbri, Giulia
SCANDURA, Massimo
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author FABBRI, Giulia
author_facet FABBRI, Giulia
author_sort FABBRI, Giulia
title Natural and Anthropogenic Influences on the Adaptive Potential of Large Mammal Isolated Populations.
title_short Natural and Anthropogenic Influences on the Adaptive Potential of Large Mammal Isolated Populations.
title_full Natural and Anthropogenic Influences on the Adaptive Potential of Large Mammal Isolated Populations.
title_fullStr Natural and Anthropogenic Influences on the Adaptive Potential of Large Mammal Isolated Populations.
title_full_unstemmed Natural and Anthropogenic Influences on the Adaptive Potential of Large Mammal Isolated Populations.
title_sort natural and anthropogenic influences on the adaptive potential of large mammal isolated populations.
publisher Università degli studi di Sassari
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/11388/312291
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/11388/312291
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
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