Conservation biology of endemic species in Netherlands
pdf (Engels)

Trefwoorden

conservation genetics
Dutch Red List
Rhine-Meuse delta
population viability
genetic distinctiveness
freshwater molluscs
Netherlands
evolutionarily significant units
microendemics
endemism

Citeerhulp

Conservation biology of endemic species in Netherlands. (2024). Zoological Records and Reviews, 4(4), 25-33. http://zoologicalrecords.com/index.php/ZRR/article/view/108

Samenvatting

True endemism -- the restriction of a species to a single nation's territory -- is uncommon in the Netherlands given its
geographic position, flat topography, and connectivity with the broader North Sea and Continental European fauna.
Nevertheless, several animal taxa show near-endemic or microendemic distributions confined to Dutch territory or its
immediate coastal and estuarine margins, including subspecies, genetically distinct populations, and regionally restricted
ecotypes of broader-range species. This study provides a systematic review and conservation assessment of seventeen
animal taxa with near-endemic or microendemic status in the Netherlands, combining genetic distinctiveness analysis
(18-locus microsatellite panels and mitochondrial sequencing for eight focal taxa; n = 1,847 individuals), population
viability analysis, habitat condition assessment, and threat quantification using Dutch Red List criteria. The seventeen
taxa span freshwater molluscs (n = 6 taxa), freshwater crustaceans (n = 3), coastal invertebrates (n = 4), and vertebrates
(n = 4 subspecies or genetically distinct populations). Genetic analysis confirmed significant differentiation from
continental conspecifics (mean FST = 0.28 +- 0.06 across eight focal taxa), supporting subspecific or evolutionarily
significant unit (ESU) status for six taxa. Population viability analysis under current threat conditions projects extinction
probability > 50% within 100 years for nine of seventeen taxa. The most severe threats are hydrological modification of
Rhine-Meuse delta dynamics (affecting freshwater molluscs and crustaceans), nitrogen-driven eutrophication, and
coastal engineering altering estuarine habitat mosaics. This assessment provides the first integrated
genetic-demographic conservation baseline for Dutch near-endemic taxa, informing priority taxon selection and
management target-setting under Dutch Nature Conservation Act obligations.

pdf (Engels)

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