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SC/69A/NH/02  

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Resource details

Resource ID

20028

Access

Open

Document Number

SC/69A/NH/02

Full Title

Determining the number of breeding populations of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in the North Atlantic and levels of mixing on the Central and Northeast Atlantic summer range

Author

Palsbøll, Bérubé, Gabualdi, Robbins, Berrow, Chalifour, Clapham, Gose, Kovacs, Lopez-Suarez, Lydersen, Magnúsdóttir, Pace, Pampoulie, Rasmussen, Ryan, Schweinsberg, Sigurjónsson, Kizildas, Tollrian, Vely, Vikingsson, Wenzel, Van Der Zee, Øien

Authors Summary

Palsbøll et al. estimated the degree of divergence and inferred the rate of contemporary connectivity among humpback whale breeding populations in the North Atlantic. Analysis was based on traditional genetic markers (simple tandem repeat loci, STRs and mitochondrial control region DNA sequences) as well as genome data (10,308 SNPs across the genome and entire mitochondrial genome DNA sequences). A single predominantly eastern North Atlantic cluster appears to be confined to winter and summer ranges within the eastern North Atlantic and likely represents the remnants of what used to be a historically isolated eastern North Atlantic breeding population. There is a 10-25% rate of immigration of individuals of western origin into the eastern breeding population. The magnitude of this introgression suggests that it is a recent phenomenon because such a high immigration rate over the long-term would have erased any signal of west-east genetic structure. Individuals with a 50 - 100 % eastern North Atlantic origin can be identified easily by genotyping 20 STR loci. Hence, it is possible to monitor if mortalities are from this much smaller population, and potentially to determine whether certain areas are critical to individuals with an eastern origin.

Publisher

IWC

Publication Year

2023

Abstract

We estimated the degree of divergence and inferred the rate of contemporary connectivity among humpback whale breeding populations in the North Atlantic. Analysis was based on traditional genetic markers (simple tandem repeat loci, STRs and mitochondrial control region DNA sequences) as well as genome data (10,308 SNPs across the genome and entire mitochondrial genome DNA sequences). A single predominantly eastern North Atlantic cluster appears to be confined to winter and summer ranges within the eastern North Atlantic and likely represents the remnants of what used to be a historically isolated eastern North Atlantic breeding population. There is a 10-25% rate of immigration of individuals of western origin into the eastern breeding population. The magnitude of this introgression suggests that it is a recent phenomenon because such a high immigration rate over the long-term would have erased any signal of west-east genetic structure. Individuals with a 50 - 100 % eastern North Atlantic origin can be identified easily by genotyping 20 STR loci. Hence, it is possible to monitor if mortalities are from this much smaller population, and potentially to determine whether certain areas are critical to individuals with an eastern origin.

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  IWC Scientific Committee / Scientific Committee Meeting Papers / SC69A | Bled 2023 / NH - Sub-Committee on the other Northern Hemisphere whale stocks