Population genetics, behavioural ecology and management of the Greywing Francolin Francolinus africanus

Bibliography: p. 237-249. === This study investigates the population genetics and behavioural ecology of the Greywing Francolin, Francolinus africanus, and identifies factors which influence the distribution and abundance of this important gamebird. It also develops scientifically sound management s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Little, Rob M
Other Authors: Crowe, Timothy M
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8403
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-84032021-11-21T05:17:15Z Population genetics, behavioural ecology and management of the Greywing Francolin Francolinus africanus Little, Rob M Crowe, Timothy M Zoology Bibliography: p. 237-249. This study investigates the population genetics and behavioural ecology of the Greywing Francolin, Francolinus africanus, and identifies factors which influence the distribution and abundance of this important gamebird. It also develops scientifically sound management strategies which should allow the maintenance of populations at levels which will produce sustained and economically viable hunting yields as a co-product of agriculture. Examination of genetic variability based on allozymes disclosed estimates of average within-population heterozygosity higher than that for most birds, and for all other galliformes for which data are available. Thus, Greywing apparently have a high degree of population stability and large effective population sizes. Indirect estimates of migration and several significant allelefrequency differences between nearby coveys suggest that there is a greater degree of genetic subdivision among Greywing populations than among populations of other birds. However, although the data suggest that populations are genetically differentiated on a large geographical scale, they also indicate that there is considerable dispersal, which produces outbred subpopulations on a fine geographical scale. Greywing therefore have a wealth of genetic variability that may 'buffer' populations against environmental changes, responsible hunting and/or short-term demographic bottlenecks. They also appear to undergo sufficient migration so that recruitment from adjacent populations will ensure population stability in hunted areas. 2014-10-11T12:21:23Z 2014-10-11T12:21:23Z 1992 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8403 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Biological Sciences
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Zoology
spellingShingle Zoology
Little, Rob M
Population genetics, behavioural ecology and management of the Greywing Francolin Francolinus africanus
description Bibliography: p. 237-249. === This study investigates the population genetics and behavioural ecology of the Greywing Francolin, Francolinus africanus, and identifies factors which influence the distribution and abundance of this important gamebird. It also develops scientifically sound management strategies which should allow the maintenance of populations at levels which will produce sustained and economically viable hunting yields as a co-product of agriculture. Examination of genetic variability based on allozymes disclosed estimates of average within-population heterozygosity higher than that for most birds, and for all other galliformes for which data are available. Thus, Greywing apparently have a high degree of population stability and large effective population sizes. Indirect estimates of migration and several significant allelefrequency differences between nearby coveys suggest that there is a greater degree of genetic subdivision among Greywing populations than among populations of other birds. However, although the data suggest that populations are genetically differentiated on a large geographical scale, they also indicate that there is considerable dispersal, which produces outbred subpopulations on a fine geographical scale. Greywing therefore have a wealth of genetic variability that may 'buffer' populations against environmental changes, responsible hunting and/or short-term demographic bottlenecks. They also appear to undergo sufficient migration so that recruitment from adjacent populations will ensure population stability in hunted areas.
author2 Crowe, Timothy M
author_facet Crowe, Timothy M
Little, Rob M
author Little, Rob M
author_sort Little, Rob M
title Population genetics, behavioural ecology and management of the Greywing Francolin Francolinus africanus
title_short Population genetics, behavioural ecology and management of the Greywing Francolin Francolinus africanus
title_full Population genetics, behavioural ecology and management of the Greywing Francolin Francolinus africanus
title_fullStr Population genetics, behavioural ecology and management of the Greywing Francolin Francolinus africanus
title_full_unstemmed Population genetics, behavioural ecology and management of the Greywing Francolin Francolinus africanus
title_sort population genetics, behavioural ecology and management of the greywing francolin francolinus africanus
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8403
work_keys_str_mv AT littlerobm populationgeneticsbehaviouralecologyandmanagementofthegreywingfrancolinfrancolinusafricanus
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