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Population genetics of caribou in the Alaska-Yukon border region: implications for designation of conservation units and small herd persistence

Cite this dataset

Mager, Karen Hibbard-Rode (2024). Population genetics of caribou in the Alaska-Yukon border region: implications for designation of conservation units and small herd persistence [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gtht76hv1

Abstract

Better knowledge of genetic relationships between the Fortymile caribou herd and its neighbors is needed for conservation decision-making in Canada. Here, we contribute the first fine-scale analysis of genetic population structure in nine contiguous caribou herds at the geographic boundaries between Barren-ground and Northern Mountain caribou, and at the Alaska-Yukon border. Using pairwise differentiation metrics, STRUCTURE, and discriminant analysis of principal components (DAPC) to analyze 15 microsatellite loci in 379 caribou, we found complex patterns of genetic differentiation. The Fortymile was the only herd assigned to more than one genetic cluster, indicative of its history as a larger herd whose range expansions and gene flow to other herds were likely important to maintaining diversity across a functioning genetic metapopulation. Some small herds (Chisana, Klaza, and White Mountains) were genetically distinct, while others (Hart River, Clear Creek, Mentasta) exhibited little differentiation from herds they occasionally overlap, including herds assigned to different conservation units (DUs). This genetic connectivity does not result from demographic connectivity, as episodic contact during rut, rather than herd switching, is the likely mechanism. Unusually, one small herd (White Mountains) maintained genetic differentiation despite rut overlap with Fortymile. Our data reveal that some herds with different ecological and behavioral attributes are demographically independent but nonetheless genetically connected. Thus, we suggest that managing caribou for an appropriate level of genetic connectivity, while also supporting herd persistence, will be essential to conserve caribou genetic diversity in the region.

README: AK-YT_Caribou_Msats

https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gtht76hv1

This dataset contains microsatellite genotypes for 379 caribou from the Alaska-Yukon border region. Samples were collected by biologists from the Yukon government, Alaska Dept of Fish and Game, and U.S. Bureau of Land Management who identified each individual's herd of origin based on presence in known seasonal ranges and/or collar location data. After DNA extraction, we used PCR to amplify data at 15 microsatellite loci using fluorescently-labeled primers, ran fragment analysis, and genotyped the data. See Mager et al. 2024 (Conservation Genetics) for detailed methods.

Description of the data and file structure

Microsatellite genotypes for 379 caribou used in this study. Columns contain variables including unique sample ID, herd, and diploid genotype (as fragment length) at each of 15 loci. Each row contains data for an individual caribou. “-9” indicates missing data.

Methods

Caribou whole blood, dried blood on filter paper, hair, and fecal samples were collected by the Yukon Department of Environment, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, and Bureau of Land Management. The herd identities of sampled caribou were determined by biologists in the natural resource agencies who sampled them, usually based on presence in known seasonal ranges and often confirmed with collar locations. Most samples were from adult females. See publication for detailed description of DNA extraction, PCR, genotyping, and error-checking protocols use to produce this dataset of genotypes of 379 individual caribou at 15 microsatellite loci. 

Funding

Yukon Department of Environment

Earlham College, Stephen and Sylvia Tregidga Burges Endowed Research Fund, and the Stephenson Fund

Southern Oregon University, Professional Development Grant