Gibeau, Michael L. Implications of preliminary genetic
findings for grizzly bear conservation in the Central Canadian Rockies.
Eastern Slopes Grizzly Bear Project, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB.
IMPLICATIONS OF
PRELIMINARY GENETIC FINDINGS FOR GRIZZLY BEAR CONSERVATION IN THE CENTRAL
CANADIAN ROCKIES
Abstract:
Genetic considerations are one of the foundations of
conservation biology. DNA analysis has quickly become the technique most
investigators use to explore the genetics of wild populations. I used
results from both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA analysis to evaluate the
genetic variability of grizzly bears captured during 1994 in the Bow River
Watershed, Alberta. Mitochondrial DNA analysis suggests that there is
little maternal gene flow between the Eastern Slopes population and the
more divergent Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem population. Evidence
also suggests a recent genetic bottleneck. Analysis of nuclear DNA using
the microsattelite approach has uncovered abundant genetic variation. This
variation is probably mostly contributed by the adult male cohort.
However, genetic diversity, measured as the level of heterozygosity, is
lower than several other northern grizzly bear populations sampled to
date. Results are discussed in relation to demographic, environmental, and
anthropogenic pressures as they affect population viability.
Eastern Slopes Grizzly Bear Project Report: 1995
It is increasingly important to understand the
ecological and evolutionary dynamics of wildlife populations as we
approach the close of the twentieth century. Many wildlife populations
have been reduced to small fractions of their former abundance during
modern times due to anthropogenic pressures such as habitat loss and
overexploitation. However, even in the absence of such pressures small
populations may be threatened by stochastic (chance or random) events.
Factors containing elements of chance that may influence population
viability include: demographic factors, environmental variability and
genetic uncertainty (Allendorf and Servheen 1986, Lande 1988, Berger 1990,
Caughley 1994).
The objectives of this paper are to: review the theory
of the genetics of small populations; describe the current techniques for
assessing modern molecular genetics; present the current knowledge of
grizzly bear genetics in the Central Canadian Rockies; and discuss the
relevance of recent findings for conservation of grizzly bears given some
of the other factors mentioned above.
Genetic considerations are one of the foundations of
conservation biology. In a recent review, Caughley (1994) points out that
about half of the conservation biology books published in the 1980's (Soule
and Wilcox 1980, Frankel and Soule 1981, Schonewald- Cox et al. 1983,
Soule 1986, 1987, Western and Pearl 1989) were on genetics. Here the
theory of minimum viable population, effective population size, population
viability analysis and extinction vortices have all been explored. Much of
the literature surrounding these topics has focused on implications for
captive breeding programs and on the design of reserve systems. The
central theme throughout is that we are faced with a population in risk of
extinction because its numbers are small and those numbers are capped.
This area of research is what Caughley (1994) terms the small-population
paradigm that abounds with theory but has yet to be broadly applied in
wild populations.
Two key concepts appear to be at the heart of
conservation biology's theoretical genetic literature: 1) inbreeding and
inbreeding depression and 2) genetic variability and genetic drift.
Breeding among closely related individuals has long been
recognized as detrimental to overall fitness in domesticated stock (Wright
1977, Falconer 1981). Fertility, birth weight, growth rate, survival rate,
disease resistance and productivity are all depressed when farm animals
are inbred. Similarly, Ralls and Ballou's (1983) review of inbreeding in
captive populations of wild animals documented higher juvenile mortality
among inbred animals of 45 species bred in zoos. Overall, inbreeding
reduces heterozygosity of the offspring below that of the rest of the
population and thus reduces fitness because it reveals harmful genes in
homozygotes (Lande 1988, Lacy 1993, Jimenez et al. 1994).
The effects of inbreeding and inbreeding depression have
not been well documented in wild populations. The case of the cheetah (Acinonyx
jubatus) has been put forward as one of the few examples of inbreeding
depression in wild populations (O'Brien 1991). Several recent reviews of
the cheetah's situation reject the notion that inbreeding is the major
problem and suggest overexploitation and habitat fragmentation are more
immediate threats (Caro and Laurenson 1994, Caughley 1994, Merola 1994).
Some of these other factors which I will discuss later in this paper may
override the effects of inbreeding in the short term. Lacy (1994)
summarizes the effect of inbreeding, stating that while no natural
population is known to have gone extinct because of inbreeding depression,
there is increasing evidence that inbreeding depression is contributing to
the decline, or impeding recovery, of some wild populations.
Genetic variability within wild populations is generally
regarded as important in maintaining high levels of fitness and allows for
adaptation to a changing environment. In small populations, random
fluctuation in gene frequency tends to reduce genetic variation, leading
eventually to homozygosity and loss of evolutionary adaptability to
environmental change. Small population size sustained for several
generations can severely deplete genetic variability (Franklin 1980, Lande
1988). There is good evidence that individuals within a population that
has recently lost some of its heterozygosity are less fit on average than
individuals of the same species within populations that have not suffered
a recent loss of heterozygosity (Caughley 1994, emphasis added). In
addition to reducing fitness and reduced ability of populations to adapt
to changing environments, Heschel and Paige (1995) suggest that loss of
variation increases susceptibility to pests, pathogens and other
environmental stresses. Caughley (1994) summarized, stating that both
genetic drift and inbreeding reduce heterozygosity. For both, the rate of
loss accelerates with declining numbers.
The two concepts merge in small populations where
concerns focus on the loss of genetic diversity occurring
deterministically through genetic drift. In the short-term, this loss of
diversity threatens the fitness of the population through the effects of
inbreeding depression. In the long-term, loss of diversity limits the
evolutionary potential of a population as adaptation to a changing
environment requires genetic variation (D. Paetkau pers. comm.). An
important factor in a population's ability to maintain diversity is how
genetically connected it is to neighbouring populations.
DNA analysis has quickly become the technique most
investigators use to explore the genetics of wild populations. The field
has expanded rapidly in the last ten years and is now routinely applied to
conservation efforts. Two distinct approaches have emerged: mitochondrial
(mt) DNA and nuclear DNA. Each has its own methods that rely on different
analyses and generate different products (see Moritz 1994 for overview of
mtDNA as well as Bruford and Wayne 1993 for overview of nuclear DNA).
Mitochondrial DNA is a circular DNA molecule residing in
the mitochondrion of eukaryotic cells, separate from the DNA of the
chromosomes, which is found in the nucleus (L.Waits pers. comm). Moritz's
(1994) review of mtDNA analysis in conservation distinguishes two classes
of applications: (1) gene conservation - the use of genetic information to
measure and manage genetic diversity for its own sake; and (2) molecular
ecology - genetic analysis as a complement to ecological studies of
demography.
Gene conservation analysis can be used to: (i) measure
genetic variation within populations, especially those thought to have
declined recently; (ii) to identify evolutionary divergent sets of
populations; and (iii) to assess conservation value of populations or
geographic areas from an evolutionary or phylogenetic perspective.
Analysis of molecular ecology is a tool for ecologists to: (i) define the
appropriate geographic scale for monitoring and management; (ii) to
provide a means for identifying the origin of individuals in migratory
species; and (iii) to test for drastic changes in population size and
connectedness.
One type of highly informative nuclear DNA marker used
to assess genetic variability is microsatellite repeats. Knowledge of
microsatellites are only now starting to unfold and may become the markers
of choice for molecular population genetics studies in the future (Bruford
and Wayne 1993). Microsatellite analysis can be used to: (1) assess
relatedness between individuals; (2) detect variation in genetically
depauperate populations; and (3) make inter-population comparisons of
genetic relatedness (Amos et al. 1993, Hughes and Queller 1993, Paetkau
and Strobeck 1994).
I used results from both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA
analysis to evaluate the genetic health of grizzly bears captured during
1994 in the Bow River Watershed, Alberta as part of the Eastern Slopes
Grizzly Bear Project (Gibeau and Herrero 1995). Analysis of mtDNA was done
by Lisette Waits at the University of Utah. Her analysis detected two
maternal lineages including 29 bears in one linage and only one bear in a
second linage. Further analysis by Waits and Ward (1995) determined the
two lineages are not unique to the Eastern Slopes of the Canadian Rockies.
Both lineages are included in the five lineages detected from grizzly
bears in the Northern Continental Divide ecosystem, and one of the two
lineages in the Yellowstone ecosystem. When comparing the Eastern Slopes
sample to mtDNA data from five other bear populations sampled to date,
only the Kodiak Island population has fewer lineages (Waits and Ward
1995).
These preliminary results suggest that there is little
maternal gene flow between the Eastern Slopes population and the more
divergent Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem population to the south.
In addition, the fact that 29 of 30 samples collected form a single mtDNA
lineage suggests a recent genetic bottleneck. The reason for this
bottleneck is unknown, although I suspect that human induced change is a
likely cause. This may occur when movement patterns are blocked by human
structures such as major transportation corridors or through direct
mortality when bears come into contact with humans.
Microsatellite DNA analysis was done by David Paetkau at
the University of Alberta. He reported the microsattelite approach has
uncovered abundant genetic variation that will allow several types of
analyses. Eastern Slopes grizzlies were found to have a 1 in 6,300,000
chance of being identical to another random, unrelated grizzly in the
population. This variability makes it possible to identify independently
obtained samples from the same individual with great confidence (ie. DNA
fingerprinting). In addition, first order (parent-offspring) relationships
between individuals can be assessed. This approach is most powerful when a
mother-offspring relationship is known and one wants to determine if a
particular male is the father. In this situation, we expect that 99.4% of
random males (males that are not the father) will be excluded in an
assessment of paternity involving Eastern Slopes grizzlies (Paetkau unpubl.
data).
His analysis also included assessing the level of gene
flow occurring between adjacent areas, or measuring the level of diversity
an isolated population has been able to maintain. This analysis, measured
as the expected level of heterozygosity between different loci, is aided
by the availability of comparison data from other populations - data
which, in the case of grizzlies, Paetkau has obtained from twelve North
American populations based on a sample of nearly seven hundred
individuals. Based on preliminary results, we are able to get a reasonably
accurate picture of the amount of genetic diversity within the study area.
The level of diversity is certainly lower than in several northern
populations, but is no lower than is seen in relatively undisturbed
habitat at the eastern end of the barren ground distribution (Paetkau
unpubl. data).
Results of these analyses appear contradictory at first
glance, however further explanation and interpretation are needed. First,
the primary mode of inheritance of mtDNA is clonal and maternal via the
egg cytoplasm. This mode of inheritance results in a rapid rate of mtDNA
differentiation among populations relative to nuclear genes, and allows
assessment of matriarchal population history and structure (Cronin 1993).
Dispite being only a single genetic marker, mtDNA is more sensitive than
nuclear DNA in assessing population bottlenecks because: (1) the effective
population size is 1/4 the effective population size for nuclear markers
meaning variation will be lost through drift much more rapidly; and (2)
male-mediated gene flow would replenish nuclear diversity, but not mtDNA
diversity. Hence, an assessment of matriarchal population history through
mtDNA results suggests the Eastern Slopes grizzly bear population has gone
through a recent genetic bottleneck and may be isolated from other
populations. This is significant in that it reaffirms speculations that
there may be a loss of connectedness to other populations or in other
words the effective population size is very small. Several studies have
suggested, however, that a combination of mtDNA and nuclear genes is
needed for a more complete description of genetic relationships (Cronin
1993, Moritz 1994).
Results from microsatellite analysis demonstrate that
there is still genetic diversity within the Eastern Slopes population
although the level of heterozygosity is lower than several other northern
grizzly bear populations sampled to date. Allendorf (1983) and Allendorf
and Servheen (1986) suggested that adequate gene flow would be maintained
with immigration of at least one successfully breeding individual per
generation. Given the wide ranging movements of male Eastern Slopes
grizzly bears, it is reasonable to assume that the diversity documented by
microsatellite analysis is being provided by the male segment of the
population. This underscores the need for landscape connectivity and
sharpens concerns about linkages across the Bow River Valley and the
Crowsnest Pass region.
This recent DNA analysis raises concerns about the
genetic history of the grizzly bear population along the Eastern Slopes of
the Canadian Rockies although inbreeding depression and genetic diversity
may not, in the short term, be the crucial factors in determining this
population's long term viability. There are other factors which override
genetic factors in wild populations as mentioned earlier in this paper.
These include random factors affecting demography and environmental
variability, as well as anthropogenic pressures such as overexploitation
and habitat loss.
Balances in the basic demographics (population growth
and age structure) within a population are governed by the law of
averages. By chance alone, small populations are at more risk of
extinction than are large populations because of the effects of skewed sex
ratios and/or negative growth rates (Shaffer 1987, Lande 1988, 1993).
Environmental variability (food supply, weather, fire) adds another
element of uncertainty acting upon an entire population. These random
events may generate fluctuations in numbers that become progressively more
severe (May 1973). There has been some debate about what factor is more
important, however Lande (1993) suggests when the long-run growth of a
population is negative, regardless of whether the cause is deterministic
or stochastic, the average extinction time scales logarithmically with
initial population size. These findings corroborate Berger's (1990)
empirical assessment of bighorn sheep where population size alone was a
marker of persistence trajectories.
Overexploitation and habitat loss at the hands of humans
also exert pressures upon small populations. Diamond's (1984, 1989)
investigations identified four human induced agents of decline including
overkill, habitat destruction and fragmentation, impact of introduced
species, and chains of extinction. His analysis indicated that humans are
the dominant cause in most post- Pleistocene extinctions. Caughley (1994)
summarizes the declining population paradigm by suggesting that a species
in trouble ends up not in the habitat most favourable to it, but in the
habitat least favourable to the agent of decline.
Grizzly bears in the Central Canadian Rockies are
probably being influenced by all the factors outlined in this paper.
Preliminary genetic results suggests the population has gone through a
genetic bottleneck and currently exhibit little gene flow with populations
to the south. However, the population continues to exhibit genetic
diversity, presumably through males. These results raise concerns about
the connectivity of the population as a whole and certainly questions the
long held belief that grizzly bears freely move up and down the length of
the Rocky Mountains.
Continued DNA sampling is required to determine what the
extent of the affected area is. What effect this situation will have on
the population is unknown at this time. However, detrimental genetic
factors may not have enough time to manifest themselves before this
population could succumb to some other short term threat. Demographic and
environmental stochasticity usually pose more immediate and potent dangers
than do genetic drift and inbreeding depression (Lande 1988); and external
agents of decline are more prevalent and dangerous than either (Caughley
1994). Hence, researchers and managers need to remain focused on reducing
immediate threats to this population while remaining cognizant of the need
for long term genetic health of grizzly bears.
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