Biodiversity Management Under Limiting Conditions: Estimating Effective Population Size Using the Molecular Mark and Recapture (MMR) Method

Although many people have been paying attention to the decrease of biodiversity on earth in recent years, many local people, even staff of national parks, live under limiting conditions (such as a shortage of funds, specialists, literature, equipment for experiments and so on). To conserve biodiver...

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Main Authors: Kaori Murase, Masaharu Fukita
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana 2014-10-01
Series:Sociobiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://periodicos.uefs.br/index.php/sociobiology/article/view/674
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spelling doaj-fed98d6ebb614d868c33777d307cf5632021-10-04T02:05:06ZengUniversidade Estadual de Feira de SantanaSociobiology0361-65252447-80672014-10-0159110.13102/sociobiology.v59i1.674Biodiversity Management Under Limiting Conditions: Estimating Effective Population Size Using the Molecular Mark and Recapture (MMR) MethodKaori Murase0Masaharu Fukita1University of TokyoUniversity of Tokio Although many people have been paying attention to the decrease of biodiversity on earth in recent years, many local people, even staff of national parks, live under limiting conditions (such as a shortage of funds, specialists, literature, equipment for experiments and so on). To conserve biodiversity, it is important to be clear about which species decrease or increase. To find such information, it is quite important to know the dynamics of effective population size for each species. Although a large number of papers have been written about how to improve the precision of the estimated effective population size, little has been studied on how to estimate the dynamics of the effective population sizes for many species together under limiting situations, very similar to the management methods of national parks in countries which have biological hot spots. In this paper, we are not concerned with the improvement of the precision of the estimates. We do, however, propose a simple method for the estimation of the effective population size. We named it the “MMR method.” It is not difficult to understand and is easily applied to many species. To show the usefulness of the MMR method we made simple virtual species, which included the first generation and the second generation, on a computer, and then we conducted simulations to estimate the effective population size of the first generation. We calculated three statistics to estimate whether the MMR method is useful or not. The three statistics showed that the MMR method is useful. http://periodicos.uefs.br/index.php/sociobiology/article/view/674population sizebiodiversitymethodologypopulation dynamics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kaori Murase
Masaharu Fukita
spellingShingle Kaori Murase
Masaharu Fukita
Biodiversity Management Under Limiting Conditions: Estimating Effective Population Size Using the Molecular Mark and Recapture (MMR) Method
Sociobiology
population size
biodiversity
methodology
population dynamics
author_facet Kaori Murase
Masaharu Fukita
author_sort Kaori Murase
title Biodiversity Management Under Limiting Conditions: Estimating Effective Population Size Using the Molecular Mark and Recapture (MMR) Method
title_short Biodiversity Management Under Limiting Conditions: Estimating Effective Population Size Using the Molecular Mark and Recapture (MMR) Method
title_full Biodiversity Management Under Limiting Conditions: Estimating Effective Population Size Using the Molecular Mark and Recapture (MMR) Method
title_fullStr Biodiversity Management Under Limiting Conditions: Estimating Effective Population Size Using the Molecular Mark and Recapture (MMR) Method
title_full_unstemmed Biodiversity Management Under Limiting Conditions: Estimating Effective Population Size Using the Molecular Mark and Recapture (MMR) Method
title_sort biodiversity management under limiting conditions: estimating effective population size using the molecular mark and recapture (mmr) method
publisher Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana
series Sociobiology
issn 0361-6525
2447-8067
publishDate 2014-10-01
description Although many people have been paying attention to the decrease of biodiversity on earth in recent years, many local people, even staff of national parks, live under limiting conditions (such as a shortage of funds, specialists, literature, equipment for experiments and so on). To conserve biodiversity, it is important to be clear about which species decrease or increase. To find such information, it is quite important to know the dynamics of effective population size for each species. Although a large number of papers have been written about how to improve the precision of the estimated effective population size, little has been studied on how to estimate the dynamics of the effective population sizes for many species together under limiting situations, very similar to the management methods of national parks in countries which have biological hot spots. In this paper, we are not concerned with the improvement of the precision of the estimates. We do, however, propose a simple method for the estimation of the effective population size. We named it the “MMR method.” It is not difficult to understand and is easily applied to many species. To show the usefulness of the MMR method we made simple virtual species, which included the first generation and the second generation, on a computer, and then we conducted simulations to estimate the effective population size of the first generation. We calculated three statistics to estimate whether the MMR method is useful or not. The three statistics showed that the MMR method is useful.
topic population size
biodiversity
methodology
population dynamics
url http://periodicos.uefs.br/index.php/sociobiology/article/view/674
work_keys_str_mv AT kaorimurase biodiversitymanagementunderlimitingconditionsestimatingeffectivepopulationsizeusingthemolecularmarkandrecapturemmrmethod
AT masaharufukita biodiversitymanagementunderlimitingconditionsestimatingeffectivepopulationsizeusingthemolecularmarkandrecapturemmrmethod
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