Authors
Simon Blanchet, Olivier Rey, Roselyne Etienne, Sovan Lek, Géraldine Loot
Publication date
2010/5
Journal
Evolutionary Applications
Volume
3
Issue
3
Pages
291-304
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Habitat fragmentation affects the integrity of many species, but little is known about species‐specific sensitivity to fragmentation. Here, we compared the genetic structure of four freshwater fish species differing in their body size (Leuciscus cephalus; Leuciscus leuciscus; Gobio gobio and Phoxinus phoxinus) between a fragmented and a continuous landscape. We tested if, overall, fragmentation affected the genetic structure of these fish species, and if these species differed in their sensitivity to fragmentation. Fragmentation negatively affected the genetic structure of these species. Indeed, irrespective of the species identity, allelic richness and heterozygosity were lower, and population divergence was higher in the fragmented than in the continuous landscape. This response to fragmentation was highly species‐specific, with the smallest fish species (P. phoxinus) being slightly affected by fragmentation. On the …
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