Dear all,


We are happy to announce our recent publication on Australian humpback whale 
population genetics in Marine Mammal Science:



Low levels of genetic differentiation characterize Australian humpback whale 
(Megaptera novaeangliae) populations



Natalie T Schmitt*, Mike Double, Scott Baker, Debbie Steel, Curt Jenner, 
Michelline Jenner, David Paton, Rosemary Gales, Simon Jarman, Nick Gales, James 
Marthick, Andrea Polanowski and Rod Peakall



*Corresponding author: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>



ABSTRACT

Humpback whales undertake long-distance seasonal migrations between low 
latitude winter breeding grounds and high latitude summer feeding grounds. We 
report the first in-depth population genetic study of the humpback whales that 
migrate to separate winter breeding grounds along the northwestern and 
northeastern coasts of Australia, but overlap on summer feeding grounds around 
Antarctica. Weak but significant differentiation between eastern and western 
Australia was detected across ten microsatellite loci (FST = 0.005, P = 0.001; 
DEST = 0.031, P = 0.001, n = 364) and mitochondrial control region sequences 
(FST = 0.017 and ?ST = 0.069, P = 0.001, n = 364). Bayesian clustering analyses 
using microsatellite data could not resolve any population structure unless 
sampling location was provided as a prior. This study supports the emerging 
evidence that weak genetic differentiation is characteristic among neighboring 
Southern Hemisphere humpback whale breeding populations. This may be a 
consequence of relatively high gene flow facilitated by overlapping summer 
feeding areas in Antarctic waters.

Key words: mtDNA, microsatellites, population genetic structure, conservation, 
management, Megaptera novaeangliae.



REFERENCE

Schmitt, N.T., Double, M.C., Baker, C.S., Steel, D., Jenner, K.C.S., Jenner, 
M.-N.M., Paton, D., Gales, R., Jarman, S.N., Gales, N., Marthick, J.R., 
Polanowski, A.M. and Peakall, R. (2014) Low levels of genetic differentiation 
characterize Australian humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) populations. 
Marine Mammal Science  30:221-241.

The PDF of this document can be downloaded from: 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mms.12045/abstract, or by emailing 
the corresponding author.

Best Wishes

Natalie



Dr. Natalie T. Schmitt



[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

ph. +61419032277


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