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Mitochondrial Control Region and microsatellite analyses on harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) unravel population differentiation in the Baltic Sea and adjacent waters
Authors
A Hastings
A Palmé
+73 more
AE Dizon
Anna Roos
Annika Wiemann
AP Rooney
AR Hoelzel
B Clausen
BS Weir
BW Kirkpatrick
C Moritz
C Moritz
CC Kinze
CC Kinze
Christina Lockyer
D Gillespie
E Valsecchi
F Tajima
Harald Benke
Iwona Pawliczka
J Teilmann
J Teilmann
JK Pritchard
Jonas Teilmann
JY Wang
K Määttänen
KA Tolley
KA Tolley
KE Skóra
KE Skóra
Kirsten B. Paulus
Krzysztof Skóra
L Excoffier
Liselotte W. Andersen
LW Andersen
LW Andersen
M Bérubé
M Clement
M Krützen
M Nei
M Raymond
MC Fontaine
MC Whitlock
MJ Walton
ML Zettler
P Berggren
P Berggren
P Berggren
P Berggren
P Berggren
P Berggren
P Börjesson
P Palsbøll
P Palsbøll
PE Rosel
PE Rosel
PE Rosel
Per Berggren
PS Hammond
R Köster
R Peakall
R Tiedemann
R Tiedemann
Ralph Tiedemann
RJ Petit
RR Sokal
S Huggenberger
S Koschinski
Thomas Lyrholm
U Siebert
UK Verfuß
Ursula Siebert
Valerio Ketmaier
WH Dudok van Heel
WR Rice
Publication date
1 January 2010
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
The population status of the harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) in the Baltic area has been a continuous matter of debate. Here we present the by far most comprehensive genetic population structure assessment to date for this region, both with regard to geographic coverage and sample size: 497 porpoise samples from North Sea, Skagerrak, Kattegat, Belt Sea, and Inner Baltic Sea were sequenced at the mitochondrial Control Region and 305 of these specimens were typed at 15 polymorphic microsatellite loci. Samples were stratified according to sample type (stranding vs. by-caught), sex, and season (breeding vs. non-breeding season). Our data provide ample evidence for a population split between the Skagerrak and the Belt Sea, with a transition zone in the Kattegat area. Among other measures, this was particularly visible in significant frequency shifts of the most abundant mitochondrial haplotypes. A particular haplotype almost absent in the North Sea was the most abundant in Belt Sea and Inner Baltic Sea. Microsatellites yielded a similar pattern (i.e., turnover in occurrence of clusters identified by STRUCTURE). Moreover, a highly significant association between microsatellite assignment and unlinked mitochondrial haplotypes further indicates a split between North Sea and Baltic porpoises. For the Inner Baltic Sea, we consistently recovered a small, but significant separation from the Belt Sea population. Despite recent arguments that separation should exceed a predefined threshold before populations shall be managed separately, we argue in favour of precautionary acknowledging the Inner Baltic porpoises as a separate management unit, which should receive particular attention, as it is threatened by various factors, in particular local fishery measures. © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2009
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