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Title
Gene flow on ice: the role of sea ice and whaling in shaping Holarctic genetic diversity and population differentiation in bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus)
Author(s)
Alter, S. E.;Rosenbaum, H. C.;Postma, L. D.;Whitridge, P.;Gaines, C.;Weber, D.;Egan, M. G.;Lindsay, M.;Amato, G.;Dueck, L.;Brownell, R. L.;Heide-Jorgensen, M. P.;Laidre, K. L.;Caccone, G.;Hancock, B. L.
Published
2012
Publisher
Ecology and Evolution
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.397
Abstract
Sea ice is believed to be a major factor shaping gene flow for polar marine organisms, but it remains unclear to what extent it represents a true barrier to dispersal for arctic cetaceans. Bowhead whales are highly adapted to polar sea ice and were targeted by commercial whalers throughout Arctic and subarctic seas for at least four centuries, resulting in severe reductions in most areas. Both changing ice conditions and reductions due to whaling may have affected geographic distribution and genetic diversity throughout their range, but little is known about range-wide genetic structure or whether it differed in the past. This study represents the first examination of genetic diversity and differentiation across all five putative stocks, including Baffin Bay-Davis Strait, Hudson Bay-Foxe Basin, Bering-Beaufort-Chukchi, Okhotsk, and Spitsbergen. We also utilized ancient specimens from Prince Regent Inlet (PRI) in the Canadian Arctic and compared them with modern stocks. Results from analysis of molecular variance and demographic simulations are consistent with recent and high gene flow between Atlantic and Pacific stocks in the recent past. Significant genetic differences between ancient and modern populations suggest PRI harbored unique maternal lineages in the past that have been recently lost, possibly due to loss of habitat during the Little Ice Age and/or whaling. Unexpectedly, samples from this location show a closer genetic relationship with modern Pacific stocks than Atlantic, supporting high gene flow between the central Canadian Arctic and Beaufort Sea over the past millennium despite extremely heavy ice cover over much of this period.
Keywords
Ancient DNA;arctic;cetacean;marine mammal;mitochondrial DNA;whaling;CANADIAN ARCTIC ARCHIPELAGO;NORTH-ATLANTIC;HUMPBACK WHALES;MARINE;MAMMALS;CONTROL REGION;BALEEN WHALES;GRAY WHALES;DNA;MITOCHONDRIAL;HOLOCENE

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