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1 June 2007 Sex-Specific Dispersal Patterns of Wolverines: Insights from Microsatellite Markers
Fredrik Dalerum, Janet Loxterman, Brad Shults, Kyran Kunkel, Joseph A. Cook
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Dispersal of individuals can be defined as movement and settling outside the natal home range. Such dispersal is often sex-biased among vertebrates, and is generally expected to be male-biased in polygynous mammals. We used microsatellite markers scored on harvested wolverines (Gulo gulo) to test the prediction of male-biased dispersal in a population in the western Brooks Range, Alaska. Our analyses suggested a high rate of dispersal within the population, but provided no support for sex differences in dispersal tendencies across the sampled spatial scale. Previous studies have implied male-biased dispersal among wolverine populations on an interpopulation scale. We suggest 3, not exclusive, explanations to reconcile these differences: low power to detect sex biases in dispersal tendencies in this panmictic population; a scale-dependent component in dispersal tendencies, where males are overrepresented among interpopulation migrants; and lower reproductive success for dispersing females compared to more philopatric ones.

Fredrik Dalerum, Janet Loxterman, Brad Shults, Kyran Kunkel, and Joseph A. Cook "Sex-Specific Dispersal Patterns of Wolverines: Insights from Microsatellite Markers," Journal of Mammalogy 88(3), 793-800, (1 June 2007). https://doi.org/10.1644/05-MAMM-A-427R1.1
Accepted: 1 January 2007; Published: 1 June 2007
KEYWORDS
carnivore
Genetics
Gulo gulo
isolation by distance
mustelid
social structure
spatial patterns
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