Download - Conservation and Population Genetics
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Arvicoline Population CyclesMyodes rufocanus (gray-sided vole)
Microtus pennsylvanicusDicrostonyx groenlandicus (collared lemming)
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Characteristics of arvicoline cycles
1) They have a huge amplitude.
2) Growth phase is very rapid.
3) The crash is very abrupt.
4) There is a lag, or low period.
5) The periodicity seems to be fairly regular.
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Characteristics of arvicoline cycles
6) There’s a latitudinal effect.
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Extrinsic Hypotheses: Food
At low vole densities, plants are unaffected by herbivory.
At high densities, there is a selective reduction of plant biomass.
This triggers production of chemical defenses by plants.
This compromises the quality of forage available to voles, which in turn, causes the crash.
The time lag is explained as the time that plant populations take to recover.Turchin & Batzl.i 2001 Ecology 82:1521.
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Extrinsic Hypotheses: Food
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Extrinsic Hypotheses: Predators
Mustela nivalis
In northern Scandinavia, there are specialist predators, Mustela nivalis and M. erminea.
In southern Scandinavia, there are generalist predators and the cycles are much less severe.Because the predators don’t crash, the voles don’t cycle.
Lots of studies have raised voles in predator-free enclosures and populations always crash.
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Intrinsic Hypothesis: Chitty Hypothesis(Behavioral genetics hypothesis)
There is a high proportion of large aggressive voles in peak populations.
The idea is that there is a genetic basis to both size and aggressive behavior.
Selection is operating within a cycle.
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Intrinsic Hypothesis: Chitty Hypothesis(Behavioral genetics hypothesis)
At first, the Chitty hypothesis was criticized on the grounds that a single cycle is too short a time period for selection to operate.
Allele frequencies in a sample from a trough can be significantly different than those in a sample from a peak
However, large size and aggressive behavior have very low heritability.
The response to selection is only possible if traits are heritable; this is not true for the crucial traits.
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Multi-factorial modelsLidicker’s Model
These act at different stages during a cycle.
At least 8 factors influence vole numbers.
Intrinsic: dispersal, reproduction, mortality, condition.
Extrinsic: parasites, predators, seasonal influences on vegetation.
Microtus californicus
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Multi-factorial modelsSocial Fence
“Social fence”
Intrinsic factors dominate Extrinsic factors
dominate