Salado, Isabel Preick, Michaela Lupiáñez-Corpas, Natividad Fernández-Gil, Alberto Vilà, Carles Hofreiter, Michael Leonard, Jennifer A
Published in
The Journal of heredity
The gray wolf (Canis lupus) population on the Iberian Peninsula was the largest in western and central Europe during most of the 20th century, with its size apparently never under a few hundred individuals. After partial legal protection in the 1970s in Spain, the northwest Iberian population increased to about 300 to 350 packs and then stabilized....
Hoy, Sarah R Brzeski, Kristin E Vucetich, Leah M Peterson, Rolf O Vucetich, John A
Published in
The Journal of heredity
Statistical inferences about inbreeding depression are often derived from analyses with low power and a high risk of failing to detect inbreeding depression. That risk is widely appreciated by scientists familiar with the relevant statistical and genetical theory, but may be overlooked and underappreciated by decision-makers. Consequently, there is...
DeCandia, Alexandra L Adeduro, Laura Thacher, Piper Crosier, Adrienne Marinari, Paul Bortner, Robyn Garelle, Della Livieri, Travis Santymire, Rachel Comizzoli, Pierre
...
Published in
The Journal of heredity
The gut microbiome of mammals engages in a dynamic relationship with the body and contributes to numerous physiological processes integral to overall health. Understanding the factors shaping animal-associated bacterial communities is therefore paramount to the maintenance and management in ex situ wildlife populations. Here, we characterized the g...
Srigyan, Megha Schubert, Blaine W Bushell, Matthew Santos, Sarah H D Figueiró, Henrique Vieira Sacco, Samuel Eizirik, Eduardo Shapiro, Beth
Published in
The Journal of heredity
The jaguar (Panthera onca) is the largest living cat species native to the Americas and one of few large American carnivorans to have survived into the Holocene. However, the extent to which jaguar diversity declined during the end-Pleistocene extinction event remains unclear. For example, Pleistocene jaguar fossils from North America are notably l...
vonHoldt, Bridgett M DeCandia, Alexandra L Cassidy, Kira A Stahler, Erin E Sinsheimer, Janet S Smith, Douglas W Stahler, Daniel R
Published in
The Journal of heredity
For species of management concern, accurate estimates of inbreeding and associated consequences on reproduction are crucial for predicting their future viability. However, few studies have partitioned this aspect of genetic viability with respect to reproduction in a group-living social mammal. We investigated the contributions of foundation stock ...
Elmore, Joanna W Wilcox, Taylor M Dutcher, Alex E Reiss, Yuki Schwartz, Michael K
Published in
The Journal of heredity
Predation is an important species interaction to monitor when assessing an invasive species' impact on a particular ecosystem, but it can be difficult to observe and thus, fully understand. On Kaua'i island, invasive Barn Owls (Tyto alba) predate native seabirds, but difficult terrain in this region and the cryptic nature of owl predation make trad...
Hennelly, Lauren M Sarwar, Ghulam Fatima, Hira Werhahn, Geraldine Abbas, Fakhar I Khan, Abdul M Mahmood, Tariq Kachel, Shannon Kubanychbekov, Zairbek Waseem, Muhammad T
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Published in
The Journal of heredity
Among the three main divergent lineages of gray wolf (Canis lupus), the Holarctic lineage is the most widespread and best studied, particularly in North America and Europe. Less is known about Tibetan (also called Himalayan) and Indian wolf lineages in southern Asia, especially in areas surrounding Pakistan where all three lineages are thought to m...
Zhang, Yulin Stern, Aaron J Nielsen, Rasmus
Published in
The Journal of heredity
Inbred populations often suffer from increased mutational load and reduced fitness due to lower efficacy of purifying selection in groups with small effective population sizes. Genetic rescue (GR) is a conservation tool that is studied and deployed with the aim of increasing the fitness of such inbred populations by assisted migration of individual...
Schweizer, Rena M Meidt, Colleen G Benavides, Ligia R Wilson, Joseph S Griswold, Terry L Sim, Sheina B Geib, Scott M Branstetter, Michael G
Published in
The Journal of heredity
The Mojave poppy bee, Perdita meconis Griswold (Hymenoptera: Anthophila: Andrenidae), is a species of conservation concern that is restricted to the eastern Mojave Desert of North America. It is a specialist pollinator of two poppy genera, Arctomecon and Argemone (Papaveraceae), and is being considered for listing under the US Endangered Species Ac...
Blackmon, Heath Jonika, Michelle M Alfieri, James M Fardoun, Leen Demuth, Jeffery P
Published in
The Journal of heredity
Chromosomal mutations such as fusions and fissions are often thought to be deleterious, especially in heterozygotes (underdominant), and consequently are unlikely to become fixed. Yet, many models of chromosomal speciation ascribe an important role to chromosomal mutations. When the effective population size (Ne) is small, the efficacy of selection...