INEDES   24797
INSTITUTO DE ECOLOGIA Y DESARROLLO SUSTENTABLE
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Genetic approach reveals a polygynous-polyandrous mating system and no social organization in a small and isolated population of the screaming hairy armadillo, Chaetophractus vellerosus
Autor/es:
DARA DOBLER; TÚNEZ, JUAN I.; DARA DOBLER; TÚNEZ, JUAN I.; NARDELLI, MAXIMILIANO; ILLIA, GIMENA; NARDELLI, MAXIMILIANO; ILLIA, GIMENA; IBAÑEZ, EZEQUIEL A.; ABBA, AGUSTIN MANUEL; IBAÑEZ, EZEQUIEL A.; ABBA, AGUSTIN MANUEL
Revista:
GENETICA
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2020 p. 125 - 133
ISSN:
0016-6707
Resumen:
The development of agro-ecosystems in the pastures of the Pampean Region has substantially modified their structure and functioning. Many wild mammal populations in the Argentinean Pampas face habitat loss and/or fragmentation due to human activities, resulting in harmful genetic effects. The screaming hairy armadillo (Chaetophractus vellerosus) is a species consideredan indicator of the state of preservation of the environments it inhabits. However, very little information is available about its mating system in the wild. In this sense, an isolated population of the screaming hairy armadillo in the northeast of Buenos Aires Province, which is separated from the main distribution area of the species by about 500 km, requires special attention. Genetic studies that analyzed social behavior and mating systems in Xenarthra are scarce but necessary to establish conservation actions for the isolated screaming hairy armadillo population under study. Thus, we analyzed the existence of a possible social organization in the species, together with its mating system, using a set of previously characterized microsatellites. Our results showed a complex scenario for the dispersal and mating system in this C. vellerosus population.Males disperse and females have a philopatric tendency with some degree of dispersal. This strategy, in combination with a polygynous-polyandrous mating system, could enhance genetic variability in this small and isolated population. In addition, no evidence of social organization was found.