Genetic Restoration of the Florida Panther
National Cancer Institute · Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission · +7 more institutions
Abstract
The rediscovery of remnant Florida panthers (Puma concolor coryi) in southern Florida swamplands prompted a program to protect and stabilize the population. In 1995, conservation managers translocated eight female pumas (P. c. stanleyana) from Texas to increase depleted genetic diversity, improve population numbers, and reverse indications of inbreeding depression. We have assessed the demographic, population-genetic, and biomedical consequences of this restoration experiment and show that panther numbers increased threefold, genetic heterozygosity doubled, survival and fitness measures improved, and inbreeding correlates declined significantly. Although these results are encouraging, continued habitat loss,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 16.19
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 19
Authors
16- WEWarren E. JohnsonCorresponding
National Cancer Institute
- DPDavid P. OnoratoCorresponding
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
- MEMelody E. RoelkeCorresponding
Science Applications International Corporation (United States)
- EDE. Darrell LandCorresponding
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
- MWMark W. Cunningham
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
Topics & keywords
- Inbreeding depression
- Inbreeding
- Genetic diversity
- Biology
- Population
- Predation
- Ecology
- Habitat
- Life in Land