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1 October 2006 GENETIC STRUCTURE OF MEXICAN SPOTTED OWL (STRIX OCCIDENTALIS LUCIDA) POPULATIONS IN A FRAGMENTED LANDSCAPE
George F. Barrowclough, Jeff G. Groth, Lisa A. Mertz, R. J. Gutiérrez
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

We used mitochondrial DNA control-region sequences to investigate the genetic structure of Mexican Spotted Owl (Strix occidentalis lucida) populations in the southwestern United States. This subspecies is federally listed as threatened, and its preferred habitat is naturally fragmented. We found that intrapopulation genetic diversity was high in all but the southeastern Arizona “sky island” populations, where it was variable. Genetic variance partitioning indicated that ≈17% of the variation was distributed among populations and 7.5% was distributed among physiographic regions. Patterns of genetic correlation with geographic distance indicated that gene flow was substantial among populations within the relatively continuous habitat zone of the Mogollon Rim-Upper Gila Mountains in central Arizona and west-central New Mexico. However, there was significant isolation-by-distance elsewhere, and estimates of genetic divergence increased exponentially with geographic distance among fragmented populations on the scale of a few hundreds of kilometers; this implies that gene flow is restricted among those habitat fragments. Genetic heterogeneity among southeastern Arizona populations suggest that they have regularly received immigrants from the central Arizona populations. The Colorado population either was larger than thought or, more likely, has continuously received immigrants from elsewhere and is not a self-sustaining population.

Estructura Genética de las Poblaciones de Strix occidentalis lucida en un Paisaje Fragmentado

George F. Barrowclough, Jeff G. Groth, Lisa A. Mertz, and R. J. Gutiérrez "GENETIC STRUCTURE OF MEXICAN SPOTTED OWL (STRIX OCCIDENTALIS LUCIDA) POPULATIONS IN A FRAGMENTED LANDSCAPE," The Auk 123(4), 1090-1102, (1 October 2006). https://doi.org/10.1642/0004-8038(2006)123[1090:GSOMSO]2.0.CO;2
Received: 6 November 2003; Accepted: 3 January 2006; Published: 1 October 2006
KEYWORDS
gene flow
Mexican spotted owl
mtDNA
PHYLOGEOGRAPHY
population genetics
Strix occidentalis
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