Population structuring and dispersal in the highly pelagic Leach's storm-petrel: implications for the EU population

Dispersal is a fundamental process that shapes many aspects of population ecology and evolution. Dramatic local population declines brought about by anthropogenic-driven changes to ecological processes are unfortunately becoming ubiquitous and increasing the urgency to understand dispersal behaviour...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bicknell, Anthony William James
Other Authors: Votier, Stephen, Faculty of Science and Technology
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: University of Plymouth 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/814
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spelling ftunivplympearl:oai:pearl.plymouth.ac.uk:10026.1/814 2023-05-15T17:52:21+02:00 Population structuring and dispersal in the highly pelagic Leach's storm-petrel: implications for the EU population Bicknell, Anthony William James Votier, Stephen Faculty of Science and Technology 2011 http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/814 en eng University of Plymouth 317822 http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/814 Population genetic structure Leach's storm-petrel Stable isotope analysis Dispersal St Kilda Doctorate 2011 ftunivplympearl 2021-03-09T18:32:42Z Dispersal is a fundamental process that shapes many aspects of population ecology and evolution. Dramatic local population declines brought about by anthropogenic-driven changes to ecological processes are unfortunately becoming ubiquitous and increasing the urgency to understand dispersal behaviour in many species. For species where direct methods of tracking movement and dispersal are unsuitable, other indirect methods need to be employed to understand and characterise these behaviours. The steep population decline, due to predation, at the largest EU population of Leach’s storm-petrels Oceanodroma leucorhoa (St Kilda, Scotland), and the potential part immigrant birds have in buffering this threat, highlighted the need to understand dispersal and connectivity of widely spaced colonies in this species. The implications for the persistence of local colonies and the wider population of Leach’s storm-petrels could then be assessed. A population genetic analysis of 9 colonies across the North Pacific and Atlantic distribution, using two DNA markers (mtDNA control region and microsatellites), revealed ocean basin differentiation (Global ST = 0.32 P <0.0001, Global FST = 0.04, P <0.0001) but also identified a migrant individual in the Pacific population (STRUCTURE migrant assignment). The Atlantic population was found to be genetically homogenous, with patterns of historical and contemporary gene flow, indicating that long-distance effective dispersal is prevalent in Leach’s storm-petrels within the ocean basin. Bayesian stable isotope analysis of carbon and nitrogen (13C & 15N) provides evidence for natal dispersal as an important dispersal mechanism, and reveals movement of immature birds between colonies during the breeding season as a likely mechanism to promote inter-colony exchange and gene flow. Stable isotope comparison also identified mixing on wintering grounds as another possible influence on dispersal. The potential for immigrant birds to offset the loss caused by predation at the St Kilda colony is supported by these studies, and will likely help the persistence of the colony in the short-term. However, future viability is debateable considering the evidence for both avian and mammalian predation. This research provides a better understanding of the extent and mechanism of dispersal in the Leach’s storm-petrel, which is important to predict the potential impact of environmental change and, where possible, implement effective population management for this species. Natural Environment Research Council & Joint Nature Conservation Committee Other/Unknown Material Oceanodroma leucorhoa PEARL (Plymouth Electronic Archiv & ResearchLibrary, Plymouth University) Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection PEARL (Plymouth Electronic Archiv & ResearchLibrary, Plymouth University)
op_collection_id ftunivplympearl
language English
topic Population genetic structure
Leach's storm-petrel
Stable isotope analysis
Dispersal
St Kilda
spellingShingle Population genetic structure
Leach's storm-petrel
Stable isotope analysis
Dispersal
St Kilda
Bicknell, Anthony William James
Population structuring and dispersal in the highly pelagic Leach's storm-petrel: implications for the EU population
topic_facet Population genetic structure
Leach's storm-petrel
Stable isotope analysis
Dispersal
St Kilda
description Dispersal is a fundamental process that shapes many aspects of population ecology and evolution. Dramatic local population declines brought about by anthropogenic-driven changes to ecological processes are unfortunately becoming ubiquitous and increasing the urgency to understand dispersal behaviour in many species. For species where direct methods of tracking movement and dispersal are unsuitable, other indirect methods need to be employed to understand and characterise these behaviours. The steep population decline, due to predation, at the largest EU population of Leach’s storm-petrels Oceanodroma leucorhoa (St Kilda, Scotland), and the potential part immigrant birds have in buffering this threat, highlighted the need to understand dispersal and connectivity of widely spaced colonies in this species. The implications for the persistence of local colonies and the wider population of Leach’s storm-petrels could then be assessed. A population genetic analysis of 9 colonies across the North Pacific and Atlantic distribution, using two DNA markers (mtDNA control region and microsatellites), revealed ocean basin differentiation (Global ST = 0.32 P <0.0001, Global FST = 0.04, P <0.0001) but also identified a migrant individual in the Pacific population (STRUCTURE migrant assignment). The Atlantic population was found to be genetically homogenous, with patterns of historical and contemporary gene flow, indicating that long-distance effective dispersal is prevalent in Leach’s storm-petrels within the ocean basin. Bayesian stable isotope analysis of carbon and nitrogen (13C & 15N) provides evidence for natal dispersal as an important dispersal mechanism, and reveals movement of immature birds between colonies during the breeding season as a likely mechanism to promote inter-colony exchange and gene flow. Stable isotope comparison also identified mixing on wintering grounds as another possible influence on dispersal. The potential for immigrant birds to offset the loss caused by predation at the St Kilda colony is supported by these studies, and will likely help the persistence of the colony in the short-term. However, future viability is debateable considering the evidence for both avian and mammalian predation. This research provides a better understanding of the extent and mechanism of dispersal in the Leach’s storm-petrel, which is important to predict the potential impact of environmental change and, where possible, implement effective population management for this species. Natural Environment Research Council & Joint Nature Conservation Committee
author2 Votier, Stephen
Faculty of Science and Technology
format Other/Unknown Material
author Bicknell, Anthony William James
author_facet Bicknell, Anthony William James
author_sort Bicknell, Anthony William James
title Population structuring and dispersal in the highly pelagic Leach's storm-petrel: implications for the EU population
title_short Population structuring and dispersal in the highly pelagic Leach's storm-petrel: implications for the EU population
title_full Population structuring and dispersal in the highly pelagic Leach's storm-petrel: implications for the EU population
title_fullStr Population structuring and dispersal in the highly pelagic Leach's storm-petrel: implications for the EU population
title_full_unstemmed Population structuring and dispersal in the highly pelagic Leach's storm-petrel: implications for the EU population
title_sort population structuring and dispersal in the highly pelagic leach's storm-petrel: implications for the eu population
publisher University of Plymouth
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/814
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Oceanodroma leucorhoa
genre_facet Oceanodroma leucorhoa
op_relation 317822
http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/814
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