Murdoch University Research Repository

Welcome to the Murdoch University Research Repository

The Murdoch University Research Repository is an open access digital collection of research
created by Murdoch University staff, researchers and postgraduate students.

Learn more

Is population structure in the European white stork determined by flyway permeability rather than translocation history?

Shephard, J.M., Ogden, R., Tryjanowski, P., Olsson, O. and Galbusera, P. (2013) Is population structure in the European white stork determined by flyway permeability rather than translocation history? Ecology and Evolution, 3 (15). pp. 4881-4895.

[img]
Preview
PDF - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (1MB)
Free to read: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.845
*No subscription required

Abstract

European white stork are long considered to diverge to eastern and western migration pools as a result of independent overwintering flyways. In relatively recent times, the western and northern distribution has been subject to dramatic population declines and country-specific extirpations. A number of independent reintroduction programs were started in the mid 1950s to bring storks back to historical ranges. Founder individuals were sourced opportunistically from the Eastern and Western European distributions and Algeria, leading to significant artificial mixing between eastern and western flyways. Here we use mitochondrial and microsatellite DNA to test the contention that prior to translocation, eastern and western flyways were genetically distinct. The data show a surprising lack of structure at any spatial or temporal scale suggesting that even though birds were moved between flyways, there is evidence of natural mixing prior to the onset of translocation activities. Overall a high retention of genetic diversity, high Nef, and an apparent absence of recent genetic bottleneck associated with early 20th century declines suggest that the species is well equipped to respond to future environmental pressures.

Item Type: Journal Article
Murdoch Affiliation(s): School of Veterinary and Life Sciences
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Copyright: © 2013 The Authors.
URI: http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/20334
Item Control Page Item Control Page

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year