Dear colleagues,
My co-authors and I are pleased to share our new publication on the genetic
diversity of Indian Ocean humpback dolphin in South African waters:

Lampert, S. G., Ingle, R. A., Jackson, J., Gopal, K. and S. Plön. 2021.
Analysis of mitochondrial control region reveals low genetic diversity of
the Indian Ocean humpback dolphin (*Sousa plumbea*) in South African
waters. *Endangered Species Research* 46: 91-103.

Abstract:  The Indian Ocean humpback dolphin *Sousa plumbea* has been
described as South Africa’s most endangered marine mammal due to its low
abundance, reliance on coastal habitats with increasing anthropogenic
threats and high rates of mortality from bycatch in bather protection nets
(BPNs). Although the species has been well studied in South Africa, only a
single study has examined its molecular ecology to date, and its population
structure remains poorly understood. However, understanding population
structure is vital for the conservation and management of a species. To
address these research gaps for *S*. *plumbea* in South African waters, we
analysed the mitochondrial D-loop of 157 museum skin and tooth samples
collected between 1963 and 2017 from across the species’ geographic range
in South Africa. Our data show that the humpback dolphin has extremely low
mitochondrial diversity (haplotype diversity, *H*D = 0.47; nucleotide
diversity, π = 0.2%) with only 3 haplotypes identified, which is comparable
to the Critically Endangered Māui dolphin *Cephalorhynchus hectori maui* and
the Critically Endangered Mekong population of Irrawaddy dolphin *Orcaella
brevirostris*. Mitochondrial genetic diversity has not changed
significantly in the last 50 yr, despite the high levels of bycatch in BPNs
over this time period. Furthermore, we found no evidence of differentiation
between dolphins from the KwaZulu-Natal Coast and the Cape South Coast
(Western Cape and Eastern Cape). The extremely low mitochondrial diversity
we found adds to the growing body of evidence that the humpback dolphin is
becoming increasingly vulnerable and that urgent conservation efforts are
required for the survival of the species.

The publication is open access and can be downloaded here:
https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/esr/v46/p91-103/

Please feel free to contact me if you should have any questions.
Best wishes, Stephanie

-- 

Assoc. Prof. Stephanie Plön

Medical Virology

Department of Pathology

Stellenbosch University

and

Bayworld Centre for Research and Education (BCRE)

Port Elizabeth

South Africa

Cell: +27-76-3791067

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Stephanie_Ploen

*https://iucn-csg.org/stephanie-plon-phd/
<https://iucn-csg.org/stephanie-plon-phd/>*
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