Rapid Colonisation of Synanthropic Stone Martens in a Highly Urbanised Region: Insights From Temporal and Spatial Analysis
Karen Cox, Jan Gouwy, Joachim Mergeay, Sabrina Neyrinck, Koen Van Den Berge

TL;DR
Stone martens adapted to urban areas and spread over 20 years, with genetic data showing complex dispersal patterns influenced by urban barriers.
Contribution
The study reveals multi-source colonization dynamics and the role of urban barriers in shaping stone marten expansion using genome-wide data.
Findings
Stone martens expanded through urban areas with dispersal influenced by motorways and other barriers.
Genetic diversity and connectivity varied across regions, with some populations diverging over time.
Initial populations showed low genetic diversity, while western populations remained more connected.
Abstract
Medium‐sized carnivores, including the synanthropic stone marten ( Martes foina Erxleben, 1777), have shown remarkable adaptability to urbanised and fragmented landscapes, facilitating their spread across mainland Europe. This study investigates the recolonisation of a highly urbanised region by stone martens within two decades, examining spatial and temporal genome‐wide data (using genotyping by sequencing) to reveal colonisation dynamics, sources, and barriers influencing their expansion. Using genotypes from 5536 SNPs across 376 stone martens collected between 1995 and 2013, our findings indicate that stone martens successfully expanded through urban environments, yet dispersal was neither entirely random nor strictly distance‐dependent. The initial southeastern stronghold (E1) showed the lowest genetic diversity and limited spatial expansion, while other population sources…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWildlife Ecology and Conservation · Genetic diversity and population structure · Genetic and phenotypic traits in livestock
