Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are happy to announce the online publication of the
following paper:

Hancock-Hanser, B.L., Baird, R.W., Archer, F.I. (retired), Rosel, P.E.,
Mignucci-Giannoni, A.A., Dolar, L., Wilcox Talbot, L.A., Martien, K.K.
2026. The shyest blackfish: the global phylogeography of the pygmy killer
whale (Feresa attenuata) suggests considerable population structure and an
unrecognized taxon. Marine Mammal Science. 42:e70127.

Abstract: Pygmy killer whales (*Feresa attenuata*) are a poorly studied,
globally-distributed species found in pelagic waters and around oceanic
islands. They are naturally rare, making them difficult to study. Reports
indicate that they are highly vulnerable to artisanal fisheries bycatch in
some areas. To investigate the global genetic structure of these animals,
we sequenced a 671 bp section of the mitochondrial control region of 89
globally distributed samples. Overall haplotypic diversity is h = 0.94 ±
0.020, while nucleotide diversity is theta = 0.0088 ± 0.0035. We found
statistically significant genetic differentiation between all pairs of
strata (FST from 0.115 to 0.381, PhiST from -0.01 to 0.876) and evidence of
phylogeographic structure. The most striking result is the deep divergence
between samples from the Sulu Sea (n = 3), which are separated from all
other pygmy killer whale haplotypes by four transitions and one indel. The
net nucleotide divergence between the Sulu Sea haplotypes and all others
(dA = 0.013) is higher than that between many recognized cetacean
subspecies and tenfold higher than that between the Pacific and western
North Atlantic samples. A Bayesian phylogenetic tree indicates that the
divergence between the Sulu Sea and the rest of the samples is comparable
to that between other sister species from the same subfamily, suggesting
the presence of an unrecognized pygmy killer whale taxon. Further study,
including more extensive sampling, is needed in order to better understand
and conserve the genetic diversity of this poorly-understood species.

The paper is Open Access at Marine Mammal Science and can be downloaded at
https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.70127. If you have any trouble accessing the
PDF, please contact me at [email protected].

--
Karen K. Martien, Ph.D.
Southwest Fisheries Science Center
8901 La Jolla Shores Dr.
La Jolla, CA 92037, USA
858-546-7058
[email protected]
http://swfsc.noaa.gov/mmtd-mmgenetics
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