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Comparative biogeography and the evolution of population structure for bottlenose and common dolphins in the Indian Ocean
Journal of Biogeography
  • Howard W.I. Gray, Durham University
  • Ing Chen, Yale NUS College
  • André E. Moura, Museum and Institute of Zoology of the Polish Academy of Sciences
  • Ada Natoli, Zayed University
  • Shin Nishida, University of Miyazaki
  • Shinsuke Tanabe, Center for Marine Environmental Studies, Ehime University
  • Gianna Minton, Megaptera Marine Conservation
  • Louisa S. Ponnampalam, The MareCet Research Organization
  • Muhammad S. Kiani, University of Karachi
  • Ross Culloch, Marine Scotland
  • Mauvis Gore, Marine Conservation International
  • Anna Särnblad, Marine Education Center
  • Omar Amir, Zanzibar University
  • Per Berggren, Newcastle University
  • Tim Collins, Wildlife Conservation Society
  • Andrew J. Willson, Future Seas Global SPC
  • Robert Baldwin, Five Oceans Environmental Services
  • A. Rus Hoelzel, Durham University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2021
Abstract

Aim: In the marine environment, where there are few physical boundaries to gene flow, there is often nevertheless intraspecific diversity with consequences for effective conservation and management. Here, we compare two closely related dolphin species with a shared distribution in the Indian Ocean (IO) to better understand the biogeographic drivers of their population structure. Location: Global oceans and seas with a focus on the Indian Ocean. Taxon: Tursiops sp. and Delphinus sp. Methods: Bayesian, ordination, assignment, statistical and phylogenetic analyses to assess phylogeography, connectivity and population structure using microsatellite and mitochondrial DNA genetic markers. Results: Both Tursiops sp. and Delphinus sp. showed population structure across the western IO and, in each case, populations in the Arabian Sea (off India, Pakistan and Oman) were most differentiated. Comparisons with other populations worldwide revealed independent lineages in this geographic region for both genera. For T. aduncus, (for which multiple sites within the IO could be compared), Bayesian modelling best supported a scenario of expansion southwards following a bottleneck event resulting in differentiation between the northern and western IO. For Delphinus, the same pattern is even more pronounced. Populations in the Arabian Sea region of the north-western IO show genetic isolation for each of the two genera, consistent with other studies of cetacean species in this region. Main conclusions: We propose that changes in the intensity of the southwest monsoon during the climate cycles of the Pleistocene could have affected regional patterns of productivity and represent an important biogeographic driver promoting the observed patterns of differentiation and population dynamics seen in our focal species. Patterns of population genetic structure are consistent with phenotypic differences, suggesting an influence from distinct habitats and resources, and emphasising the need for effective conservation measures in this geographic region.

Disciplines
Keywords
  • biodiversity,
  • conservation,
  • Delphinus,
  • phenotype,
  • phylogeography,
  • Tursiops
Scopus ID

85105073618

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Indexed in Scopus
Yes
Open Access
Yes
Open Access Type
Hybrid: This publication is openly available in a subscription-based journal/series
Citation Information
Howard W.I. Gray, Ing Chen, André E. Moura, Ada Natoli, et al.. "Comparative biogeography and the evolution of population structure for bottlenose and common dolphins in the Indian Ocean" Journal of Biogeography (2021) ISSN: <p><a href="https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/issn/0305-0270" target="_blank">0305-0270</a></p>
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/ada-natoli/3/