Dear colleagues,

On behave of my colleagues I am pleased to announce our new paper on the 
population genetic structure for Risso’s dolphins has just been published:


Chen I, Nishida S, Chou L‐S, Tajima Y, Yang W‐C, Isobe T, Yamada T K, Hartman 
K, & Hoelzel A. R. (2018) Concordance between genetic diversity and marine 
biogeography in a highly mobile marine mammal, the Risso's dolphin. Journal of 
Biogeography (early view) https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13360 
<https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13360>

*Abstract*

(Aim)  The heterogeneity of the marine environment is thought to be the origin 
of marine biodiversity, often delineated in marine biogeographical provinces. 
Cetaceans are highly mobile aquatic mammals, but even those species inhabiting 
seemingly boundary‐free open waters are found to exhibit degrees of population 
structure, often attributed to ecological and behavioural factors such as 
resource specialization and site fidelity. Our aim in this study is to test the 
hypothesis that a cosmopolitan, resource‐specialist dolphin species, the 
Risso's dolphin (Grampus griseus) will show an association between genetic 
diversity and biogeographical provinces.

(Location)  North Pacific and North Atlantic Oceans.

(Methods)  We examined genetic variation at 19 microsatellite loci among 236 
samples collected from a range of locations in the North Pacific Ocean, and for 
a 473 bp mitochondrial DNA control region sequence in 213 samples from the 
North Pacific and North Atlantic Oceans to assess genetic diversity, population 
structure and historic population dynamics.

(Results)  We found differentiation in the North Pacific primarily among three 
populations corresponding to the marine biogeographical provinces of the 
Kuroshio‐Oyashio Current (Sino‐Japanese), California Current (California), and 
Eastern Tropical Pacific. Analyses using mitochondrial DNA data further reveal 
that these three populations are genetically different from the populations in 
the North Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea, without strong lineage sorting, 
and that the western North Pacific population experienced a period of 
population expansion while the Eastern Tropical Pacific population remained 
stable.

(Main conclusions)  We find evidence for biogeographical endemism in a highly 
mobile marine mammal species that nevertheless shows evidence for long‐range 
dispersion within and to a lesser extent among biogeographical provinces. We 
conclude that distinct ecological processes promote differentiation, even 
though this species forages on narrow range of prey species.


Please contact the corresponding author (Rus Hoelzel) or myself (chen.inge /at/ 
gmail.com) for a private pdf copy of this paper. 


Regards,

Ing Chen

****
Ing Chen, PhD
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Division of Science, Yale-NUS College
National University of Singapore
16 College Avenue West, 138527, Singapore
chen.inge /at/ gmail.com

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