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Population structure and historical demography of eastern North Atlantic harbour porpoises inferred through mtDNA sequences

Tolley, Krystal A.; Rosel, Patricia E.
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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m327p297.pdf (566.4Kb)
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/109120
Utgivelsesdato
2006-12-07
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Originalversjon
http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/meps327297
Sammendrag
The harbour porpoise Phocoena phocoena experiences high rates of incidental mortality

in commercial fisheries, and in some areas these rates are sufficiently high to justify concern over

population sustainability. Given this high mortality, conservation efforts may be facilitated by an

understanding of how present-day population structure has been shaped by historical demographic

changes. To investigate the demographic history of porpoises in the eastern North Atlantic, variation

in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region of 115 porpoises was compared among 4 sampling

locations (North Sea, France, Portugal, and West Africa). Genetic variation was investigated by

analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) and spatial analysis of molecular variance (SAMOVA). To

put the present study in context within the eastern Atlantic, previously published sequence data from

Norway (n = 87) and the Black Sea (n = 9) were included. All areas showed substantial geographic

structure as indicated by AMOVA and SAMOVA, and there was significant isolation by distance

among sampling areas. The haplotype network, mismatch distribution and Fu’s FS test of population

equilibrium suggest there has been a relatively recent range expansion into the northernmost area

(Norway), probably as a result of re-colonisation into regions previously iced over during Quaternary

glaciation events. In all, these results suggest that harbour porpoises within the eastern North

Atlantic show geographic structuring as a consequence of limited gene flow along the coast, and their

historical biogeography can be interpreted in light of demographic changes that have influenced the

evolutionary patterns observed in the mtDNA sequences.
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Marine Ecology Progress Series

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