Determining size and dispersion of minimum viable populations for land management planning and species conservation
Abstract
The concept of minimum populations of wildlife and plants has only recently been discussed in the literature. Population genetics has emerged as a basic underlying criterion for determining minimum population size. This paper presents a genetic framework and procedure for determining minimum viable population size and dispersion strategies in the context of multiple-use land management planning. A procedure is presented for determining minimum population size based on maintenance of genetic heterozygosity and reduction of inbreeding. A minimum effective population size ( N e ) of 50 breeding animals is taken from the literature as the minimum shortterm size to keep inbreeding below 1% per generation. Steps in the procedure adjust N e to account for variance in progeny number, unequal sex ratios, overlapping generations, population fluctuations, and period of habitat/population constraint. The result is an approximate census number that falls within a range of effective population size of 50 500 individuals. This population range defines the time range of short- to long-term population fitness and evolutionary potential. The length of the term is a relative function of the species generation time. Two population dispersion strategies are proposed: core population and dispersed population.
- Publication:
-
Environmental Management
- Pub Date:
- March 1984
- DOI:
- 10.1007/BF01866938
- Bibcode:
- 1984EnMan...8..167L
- Keywords:
-
- Minimum viable populations;
- Endangered species;
- Heterozygosity;
- Inbreeding;
- Forest planning;
- Dispersion;
- Wildlife management