The authors of the letter point to the results from extensive genetic monitoring of the population that have revealed persistent genetic isolation that have resulted in extreme levels of inbreeding – individuals are on average as closely related as siblings. Negative effects of this inbreeding have been documented, and recent studies focusing on the entire genome of these wolves show genetic erosion with dramatic losses of variability.
The authors stress that to improve the poor conservation situation of Swedish wolves the population size should increase and extensive connectivity with populations over Norway-Sweden-Finland should be secured. The authors are researchers in population, evolutionary and conservation genetics/genomics, conservation biology, wildlife ecology and ethology.
Letter in Science 8 July 2022: Planned cull endangers Swedish wolf population, www.science.org/journal/science
Contacts:
Linda Laikre, Stockholm University, [email protected]
Fred Allendorf, University of Montana, [email protected]
Christina Hansen Wheat, Lund University, [email protected]
Marty Kardos, NOAA, [email protected]
Carles Vilà, The Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), [email protected]
Christopher W. Wheat, Stockholm University, [email protected]