Publications by authors named "Brenna A McLeod"

For small, isolated populations 2 common conservation concerns relate to genetic threats: inbreeding and negative consequences associated with loss of genetic diversity due to drift. Mitigating these threats often involves conservation actions that can be controversial, such as translocations or captive breeding programs. Although such actions have been successful in some situations, in others they have had undesirable outcomes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Temperate bats migrate from summering sites to swarming sites during late summer and early autumn, likely for mating purposes, but the specifics of this migration are not fully understood.
  • The study focused on two bat species - the little brown bat and the northern long-eared bat - to investigate migratory patterns between summering and swarming locations using genetic markers.
  • Results showed moderate genetic differentiation among summering and swarming sites, with swarming sites having higher haplotype diversity, indicating a mix of individuals from different summering areas and not just nearby colonies.
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Species biogeography is a result of complex events and factors associated with climate change, ecological interactions, anthropogenic impacts, physical geography, and evolution. To understand the contemporary biogeography of a species, it is necessary to understand its history. Specimens from areas of localized extinction are important, as extirpation of species from these areas may represent the loss of unique adaptations and a distinctive evolutionary trajectory.

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Mitochondrial heteroplasmy has been identified in a variety of species and can result from either paternal leakage, whereby sperm mitochondria enter the ova during fertilization, or more commonly by the "survival" and proliferation of mutant variants within an organism. From an evolutionary perspective, this process represents the generation of new mitochondrial diversity within a species. Although this has been documented in some mammalian species, it has been reported from relatively few wild mammalian populations and in no wild nonhuman population has the transfer and segregation of mitochondrial heteroplasmy been tracked through multiple generations.

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