Assessing changes in connectivity and abundance through time for fisher in the southern Sierra Nevada

Small populations are at increased risk of extinction due to their vulnerability to stochastic events. The population of fisher (<italic>Pekania pennanti</italic>, formerly <italic>Martes pennanti</italic>) in the southern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California is small and co...

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Main Author: Tucker, Jody Marlene
Other Authors: Fred W Allendorf
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: The University of Montana 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.lib.umt.edu/theses/available/etd-07082013-133633/
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spelling ndltd-MONTANA-oai-etd.lib.umt.edu-etd-07082013-1336332013-07-18T15:21:06Z Assessing changes in connectivity and abundance through time for fisher in the southern Sierra Nevada Tucker, Jody Marlene Wildlife Biology Small populations are at increased risk of extinction due to their vulnerability to stochastic events. The population of fisher (<italic>Pekania pennanti</italic>, formerly <italic>Martes pennanti</italic>) in the southern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California is small and completely genetically isolated. My dissertation research investigates the timing and cause of this population's isolation, the degree of genetic subdivision within the population, the landscape features shaping gene flow, and the detection of population declines. I detected a 90% decline in effective population size and dated the time of decline to over a thousand years ago. Analyzing historical and contemporary genetic samples, I also found a recent bottleneck signal in the northern portion of the southern Sierra Nevada, indicating the southernmost tip of these mountains may have acted as a refugium for fisher in the late 19th century. I conclude that this population became isolated pre-European settlement, and that portions of the southern Sierra Nevada subsequently experienced another more recent bottleneck post-European settlement. I found that the southern Sierra Nevada fisher population is not highly genetically subdivided as previously thought. This population follows a pattern of isolation by distance with additional structuring that corresponds to geographic features and management boundaries. It can be characterized as having areas that are resistant to gene flow but without major barriers. I show that both sex-biased dispersal and spatial landscape heterogeneity can affect the determination of what landscape features structure gene flow, and that the landscape features influencing gene flow are different for each sex and within different geographic regions. Using a spatially-based simulation approach, I investigated the power of the Sierra Nevada fisher monitoring program to detect population trend, and illustrate the relationship between occupancy and abundance in this population. I show that a simulated 43% decline in abundance over an 8-year period only resulted in a 23% decline in occupancy. I also found that increasing the effective sampling area, implementing biennial instead of annual sampling, and increasing the type I error rate all increase statistical power to detect trend. Overall this research provides a better understanding of the historical and contemporary connectivity of this population and our ability to monitor population trends over time that will contribute to the conservation of fisher populations in the future. Fred W Allendorf Michael K Schwartz Mark Hebblewhite Michael S Mitchell David A Patterson The University of Montana 2013-07-17 text application/pdf http://etd.lib.umt.edu/theses/available/etd-07082013-133633/ http://etd.lib.umt.edu/theses/available/etd-07082013-133633/ en unrestricted I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached hereto a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to University of Montana or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report.
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Wildlife Biology
spellingShingle Wildlife Biology
Tucker, Jody Marlene
Assessing changes in connectivity and abundance through time for fisher in the southern Sierra Nevada
description Small populations are at increased risk of extinction due to their vulnerability to stochastic events. The population of fisher (<italic>Pekania pennanti</italic>, formerly <italic>Martes pennanti</italic>) in the southern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California is small and completely genetically isolated. My dissertation research investigates the timing and cause of this population's isolation, the degree of genetic subdivision within the population, the landscape features shaping gene flow, and the detection of population declines. I detected a 90% decline in effective population size and dated the time of decline to over a thousand years ago. Analyzing historical and contemporary genetic samples, I also found a recent bottleneck signal in the northern portion of the southern Sierra Nevada, indicating the southernmost tip of these mountains may have acted as a refugium for fisher in the late 19th century. I conclude that this population became isolated pre-European settlement, and that portions of the southern Sierra Nevada subsequently experienced another more recent bottleneck post-European settlement. I found that the southern Sierra Nevada fisher population is not highly genetically subdivided as previously thought. This population follows a pattern of isolation by distance with additional structuring that corresponds to geographic features and management boundaries. It can be characterized as having areas that are resistant to gene flow but without major barriers. I show that both sex-biased dispersal and spatial landscape heterogeneity can affect the determination of what landscape features structure gene flow, and that the landscape features influencing gene flow are different for each sex and within different geographic regions. Using a spatially-based simulation approach, I investigated the power of the Sierra Nevada fisher monitoring program to detect population trend, and illustrate the relationship between occupancy and abundance in this population. I show that a simulated 43% decline in abundance over an 8-year period only resulted in a 23% decline in occupancy. I also found that increasing the effective sampling area, implementing biennial instead of annual sampling, and increasing the type I error rate all increase statistical power to detect trend. Overall this research provides a better understanding of the historical and contemporary connectivity of this population and our ability to monitor population trends over time that will contribute to the conservation of fisher populations in the future.
author2 Fred W Allendorf
author_facet Fred W Allendorf
Tucker, Jody Marlene
author Tucker, Jody Marlene
author_sort Tucker, Jody Marlene
title Assessing changes in connectivity and abundance through time for fisher in the southern Sierra Nevada
title_short Assessing changes in connectivity and abundance through time for fisher in the southern Sierra Nevada
title_full Assessing changes in connectivity and abundance through time for fisher in the southern Sierra Nevada
title_fullStr Assessing changes in connectivity and abundance through time for fisher in the southern Sierra Nevada
title_full_unstemmed Assessing changes in connectivity and abundance through time for fisher in the southern Sierra Nevada
title_sort assessing changes in connectivity and abundance through time for fisher in the southern sierra nevada
publisher The University of Montana
publishDate 2013
url http://etd.lib.umt.edu/theses/available/etd-07082013-133633/
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