2005
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2004.0266
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Severe inbreeding depression in a wild wolfCanis lupuspopulation

Abstract: The difficulty of obtaining pedigrees for wild populations has hampered the possibility of demonstrating inbreeding depression in nature. In a small, naturally restored, wild population of grey wolves in Scandinavia, founded in 1983, we constructed a pedigree for 24 of the 28 breeding pairs established in the period 1983–2002. Ancestry for the breeding animals was determined through a combination of field data (snow tracking and radio telemetry) and DNA microsatellite analysis. The population was founded by on… Show more

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Cited by 226 publications
(283 citation statements)
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“…Both incestuous mating and the presence of unrelated adoptees have been documented in other wolf populations (e.g. Jędrzejewski et al 2005;Liberg et al 2005;vonHoldt et al 2008;Rutledge et al 2010). Incestuous mating may occur if a breeding individual is lost close to the breeding season (Liberg et al 2005;vonHoldt et al 2008), while adoption can occur outside the breeding season.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Both incestuous mating and the presence of unrelated adoptees have been documented in other wolf populations (e.g. Jędrzejewski et al 2005;Liberg et al 2005;vonHoldt et al 2008;Rutledge et al 2010). Incestuous mating may occur if a breeding individual is lost close to the breeding season (Liberg et al 2005;vonHoldt et al 2008), while adoption can occur outside the breeding season.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jędrzejewski et al 2005;Liberg et al 2005;vonHoldt et al 2008;Rutledge et al 2010). Incestuous mating may occur if a breeding individual is lost close to the breeding season (Liberg et al 2005;vonHoldt et al 2008), while adoption can occur outside the breeding season. Jędrzejewski et al (2005) documented both incestuous mating and a presence of an unrelated, non-breeding male in one pack in an intensely hunted population.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This fitness decrease is for the greater part thought to be caused by fixation of recessive detrimental variation (Hedrick 1994;Charlesworth and Charlesworth 1999;Wang et al 1999) thereby significantly elevating the extinction risk of populations (Newman and Pilson 1997;Saccheri et al 1998;Bijlsma et al 2000). Although the importance of inbreeding depression in conservation biology has been hotly debated (Caughley 1994;Hedrick et al 1996), there is now increasing evidence that inbreeding depression is present in population of many wild living species (Keller and Waller 2002) and does significantly contribute to the extinction risk of populations (Hedrick 1995;Spielman et al 2004;Liberg et al 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…captive wolves (Canis lupus), Laikre and Ryman 1991; grey wolves on Isle Royale, Peterson et al 1998; Scandinavian wolves, Liberg et al 2005; Mexican wolves (Canis lupus baileyi), Fredrickson et al 2007). In the case of an isolated and genetically depleted population of grey wolves in Scandinavia, the arrival of one immigrant led to selective outbreeding, which caused an increase in heterozygosity, the introduction of new alleles, and an exponential population growth (Vilà et al 2003).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%