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A recent bottleneck in the warthog and elephant populations of Queen Elizabeth National Park, revealed by a comparative study of four mammalian species in Uganda national parks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2003

Vincent B. Muwanika
Affiliation:
Institute of Environment and Natural Resources, Makerere University, PO Box 7298, Kampala, Uganda
Hans R. Siegismund
Affiliation:
Zoological Institute, Department of Evolutionary Biology, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
John Bosco A. Okello
Affiliation:
Institute of Environment and Natural Resources, Makerere University, PO Box 7298, Kampala, Uganda
Charles Masembe
Affiliation:
Institute of Environment and Natural Resources, Makerere University, PO Box 7298, Kampala, Uganda
Peter Arctander
Affiliation:
Zoological Institute, Department of Evolutionary Biology, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15, DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
Silvester Nyakaana
Affiliation:
Institute of Environment and Natural Resources, Makerere University, PO Box 7298, Kampala, Uganda
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Abstract

Until 1972, Uganda's national parks boasted of large numbers of large mammal species. Following the breakdown of law and order between 1972 and 1985, large-scale poaching led to an unprecedented decline in numbers of most large mammals in Uganda's national parks. However, the extent of decline varied in the different parks across different animal species. We have investigated the genetic effects of these reductions in four mammalian species (the common warthog, African savannah elephant, savannah buffalo and common river hippopotamus) from the three major parks of Uganda using both microsatellite loci (for elephant and warthog populations) and mitochondrial control sequence variation in the warthogs, elephants, buffaloes and hippopotamuses. Queen Elizabeth National Park showed extreme reduction in nucleotide diversity for two species, the common warthog (π = 0.0%) and African elephant (π = 0.4%); no such decrease was found for the two other species, the buffalo (π = 3.7-5.4%) and hippopotamus (π = 1.7-1.9%), in the three parks. Nuclear microsatellite markers on the other hand showed high gene diversity in all populations in the common warthog (mean He 0.66-0.78) and the African savannah elephant (mean He 0.68-0.72). We interpret these results in terms of varying poaching pressure in the different parks, susceptibility of different species to poaching and differences in effective population sizes at the mitochondrial and nuclear loci.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2003 The Zoological Society of London

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