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Evaluating possible anthropogenic impacts on gene flow and loss of genetic diversity in endangered Madla Cave Meshweaver spiders (Hahniidae, Cicurina madla)

Karst systems have great ecological, cultural and economic importance, but are constantly threatened by human development. Northwestern Bexar County, Texas (USA), is an example of a region where urbanization threatens an essential karst landscape. Many studies have provided substantial contributions...

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Published in:Conservation genetics 2024-02, Vol.25 (1), p.149-164
Main Authors: Azevedo, Guilherme H. F., Blair, Jennifer, Hedin, Marshal
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description Karst systems have great ecological, cultural and economic importance, but are constantly threatened by human development. Northwestern Bexar County, Texas (USA), is an example of a region where urbanization threatens an essential karst landscape. Many studies have provided substantial contributions to the understanding and conservation of biodiversity in this area, including the delineation of Karst Fauna Regions (KFRs). However, no study has evaluated fundamentally important measures of genetic diversity, changes in population sizes, and gene flow for listed regional species. Here we used population genomic data derived from the sequence capture of ultraconserved elements (UCEs) to describe patterns of structure and connectivity among cave populations of Cicurina madla , and to estimate demographic and phylogeographic processes underlying those patterns. In addition, we evaluated if population genetic processes could have been influenced by human activities. Although there is weak phylogenomic differentiation between populations, the distribution of genetic diversity and patterns of gene flow within and between areas suggest important differences in population dynamics among KFRs. Our genomic data show that populations of C. madla in Bexar County currently carry comparatively low levels of heterozygosity and nucleotide diversity, and that these might have been influenced by human activities. Ultimately, we present genomic evidence for declining cave spider population sizes perhaps coincident with increases in an expanding human population and discuss implications of our findings for conservation.
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subjects Animal Genetics and Genomics
Anthropogenic factors
Biodiversity
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Conservation
Conservation Biology/Ecology
Ecology
Economic importance
Evolutionary Biology
Gene flow
Genetic diversity
Genomics
Heterozygosity
Human influences
Human populations
Karst
Life Sciences
Nucleotides
Plant Genetics and Genomics
Population
Population decline
Population dynamics
Population genetics
Populations
Research Article
Urbanization
Wildlife conservation
title Evaluating possible anthropogenic impacts on gene flow and loss of genetic diversity in endangered Madla Cave Meshweaver spiders (Hahniidae, Cicurina madla)
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