
Evolutionary dynamics of a rapidly receding southern range boundary in the threatened C alifornia R ed‐ L egged F rog ( R ana draytonii )
Author(s) -
Richmond Jonathan Q.,
Barr Kelly R.,
Backlin Adam R.,
Vandergast Amy G.,
Fisher Robert N.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
evolutionary applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.776
H-Index - 68
ISSN - 1752-4571
DOI - 10.1111/eva.12067
Subject(s) - biology , threatened species , genetic diversity , ecology , range (aeronautics) , population , disturbance (geology) , evolutionary biology , genetic structure , demography , habitat , paleontology , materials science , sociology , composite material
Populations forming the edge of a species range are often imperiled by isolation and low genetic diversity, with proximity to human population centers being a major determinant of edge stability in modern landscapes. Since the 1960s, the C alifornia r ed‐ l egged f rog ( R ana draytonii ) has undergone extensive declines in heavily urbanized southern C alifornia, where the range edge has rapidly contracted northward while shifting its cardinal orientation to an east‐west trending axis. We studied the genetic structure and diversity of these frontline populations, tested for signatures of contemporary disturbance, specifically fire, and attempted to disentangle these signals from demographic events extending deeper into the past. Consistent with the genetic expectations of the ‘abundant‐center’ model, we found that diversity, admixture, and opportunity for random mating increases in populations sampled successively further away from the range boundary. Demographic simulations indicate that bottlenecks in peripheral isolates are associated with processes extending tens to a few hundred generations in the past, despite the demographic collapse of some due to recent fire‐flood events. While the effects of recent disturbance have left little genetic imprint on these populations, they likely contribute to an extinction debt that will lead to continued range contraction unless management intervenes to stall or reverse the process.