Incipient genetic differentiation of the African buffalo, Syncerus
caffer populations: Is fencing playing a role?
Abstract
Fences are increasingly used globally as a management tool in
conservation to reduce wildlife depredations, disease transmission, and
wildlife mortality. There are a limited number of studies on the genetic
effects of perimeter fencing of protected areas on megaherbivores. Using
population genetic analyses on 226 sequences of a 400 bp fragment of the
mtDNA Dloop from 10 East African buffalo populations (3 fenced and 7
unfenced), the influence of spatial isolation and fencing on buffalo
population genetic diversity and genetic differentiation were examined.
Mean gene diversity between fenced and unfenced buffalo populations was
not different (fenced: 0.978 ± 0.003, unfenced: 0.973 ± 0.004, P =
0.300) but nucleotide diversity was higher in fenced than unfenced
populations (fenced: 0.038 ± 0.019, unfenced: 0.030 ± 0.015, P = 0.005).
Genetic differentiation among buffalo populations based on haplotype
frequencies and model-based genetic distance was weak (FST = 0.08, ΦST =
0.06) and contributed to 6.2% and 8.5% of total genetic variance
respectively. Ninety three percent of population pairs were genetically
differentiated by distances determined from haplotype frequencies but
only 51% of population pairs were differentiated using modelled
distances suggesting recent differentiation. There was no correlation
between linearized FST and geographical distance (r = -0.005, P = 0.52),
but linearized ΦST was moderately correlated with geographic distance (r
= 0.329, P = 0.03). The distance effect was greater when fenced
populations were excluded (ΦST: r = 0.464, P = 0.05), suggesting that
insularization due to fencing is distorting isolation by distance. SSD
analyses revealed that 2 of 3 fenced populations and 2 of 7 unfenced
populations had non-unimodal distributions suggesting demographically
declining populations. Our study reveals the high genetic diversity but
warn that genetic erosion due to isolation, including fencing, is only
beginning to have an impact on East African buffalo populations.