Conservation translocations can restore populations and prevent extinction of threatened species. Sourcing adequate genetic diversity is an essential consideration when planning reintroductions, because it influences individual fitness and long-term persistence of populations, yet available populations of threatened species may lack diversity. We estimated population genetic parameters for one of Australia’s most threatened mammals, the northern bettong, Bettongia tropica, to select source populations for reintroduction. Individuals from sites across the species’ extant range in the Wet Tropics of north Queensland were genotyped, using 6,133 informative SNPs. We found that samples clustered into four populations: an isolated northern popula...
Translocations are an important conservation strategy for many species. However simply observing dem...
Incorporating genetic data into conservation programmes improves management outcomes, but the impact...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to the world’s biodiversity. Throughout Australia, ...
Available online 05 January 2018Reintroduction programs aim to restore self-sustaining populations o...
Australia’s mammal fauna has suffered a dramatic decline over the last 200 years, with 30 species be...
The loss of genetic variation and genetic divergence from source populations are common problems for...
Many Australian mammal species now only occur on islands and fenced mainland havens free from invasi...
The value of genetic management is increasingly recognised in natural resource management particular...
Little genetic research has been undertaken on mammals across the vast expanse of the arid biome in ...
The use of multiple source populations provides a way to maximise genetic variation and reduce the i...
BACKGROUND: As increasingly fragmented and isolated populations of threatened species become subject...
The northern bettong, Bettongia tropica, is an endangered species of Potoroidae with a restricted di...
Major prehistoric forces, such as the climatic shifts of the Pleistocene, can remain visible in a sp...
Dispersal, the movement of individuals or gametes, is one of the most important life history traits ...
The identification and classification of species are essential for effective conservation management...
Translocations are an important conservation strategy for many species. However simply observing dem...
Incorporating genetic data into conservation programmes improves management outcomes, but the impact...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to the world’s biodiversity. Throughout Australia, ...
Available online 05 January 2018Reintroduction programs aim to restore self-sustaining populations o...
Australia’s mammal fauna has suffered a dramatic decline over the last 200 years, with 30 species be...
The loss of genetic variation and genetic divergence from source populations are common problems for...
Many Australian mammal species now only occur on islands and fenced mainland havens free from invasi...
The value of genetic management is increasingly recognised in natural resource management particular...
Little genetic research has been undertaken on mammals across the vast expanse of the arid biome in ...
The use of multiple source populations provides a way to maximise genetic variation and reduce the i...
BACKGROUND: As increasingly fragmented and isolated populations of threatened species become subject...
The northern bettong, Bettongia tropica, is an endangered species of Potoroidae with a restricted di...
Major prehistoric forces, such as the climatic shifts of the Pleistocene, can remain visible in a sp...
Dispersal, the movement of individuals or gametes, is one of the most important life history traits ...
The identification and classification of species are essential for effective conservation management...
Translocations are an important conservation strategy for many species. However simply observing dem...
Incorporating genetic data into conservation programmes improves management outcomes, but the impact...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats to the world’s biodiversity. Throughout Australia, ...