Dear Colleagues,
On behavior of my co-author, I would like to announce the publication of our 
new paper: 

Lin W., Karczmarski L., Wu Y., 2017. Phylogeography of the finless porpoise and 
potential implications for the taxonomy of Neophocaena spp. Mammalian Biology - 
Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde, 86: 92-101.

Abstract: The finless porpoise (genus Neophocaena) is a poorly known cetacean 
of great conservation concern. Within its range, from western Pacific to 
northwestern Indian Ocean, there are currently two species recognized (N. 
asiaeorientalis and N. phocaenoides), thought to be reproductively isolated 
since last glacial maximum, with the only sympatric overlap zone in Taiwan 
Strait. However, the genetic variation across the genus’ distribution has not 
yet been extensively studied, especially in the Indian Ocean. We performed an 
exhaustive review of molecular data of the finless porpoise across its range. 
Neighbor-net networks analyses based on two mitochondrial loci (control 
region/CR and cytochrome b/cyt b) suggest that finless porpoises from the 
Indian and Pacific Ocean constitute two distinct clades, well-defined by fixed 
mutations at both loci. A molecular clock analyses indicate early split (CR: 
13.1 Ma, cyt b: 12.9 Ma) between these two oceanic lineages, while spatial 
genetic analyses further suggest that in the Pacific the divergence was 
primarily due to the taxon from Japanese waters rather than inter-species 
divergence across the Taiwan Strait. As extinction risks can be substantially 
underestimated if threatened species are pooled together with non-threatened, 
especially in the absence of long-distance migration, we suggest that the 
present 2-species taxonomy of the genus Neophocaena should be given further 
examination, with concerted sampling effort in the Western Indian Ocean. More 
research effort and genomic information is needed before taxonomic revisions 
can be considered; such further studies are strongly recommended as they may 
affect the current status classification of the species constituting the genus 
Neophocaena. Most notably, the narrow-ridged finless porpoise off Japan merits 
urgent conservation attention.

The paper is available at the following link:                                 
https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1VT4QAOM9hfrR

Cheers,

Wenzhi Lin




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