We are pleased to announce the publication of our paper describing how 
fertilization patterns in North Atlantic right whales are biased towards 
genetically dissimilar gametes.  The short-term implication is that this 
process may be partially responsible for the reduced reproductive performance 
of this species, but in the long-term it has resulted in a slight increase in 
heterozygosity in calves born throughout the study period.  Thus, it appears to 
be a double-edged sword in terms implications, depending on if you look at it 
from a short- or long-term scale.

This was the subject of my "speed talk" at the last Society for Marine 
Mammalogy conference (in Florida).

It is published in the Open Access journal Ecology and Evolution, and should 
therefore be free for all.  A link is below.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.738/abstract

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Timothy R. Frasier
Department of Biology & Forensic Sciences Program
Saint Mary's University
923 Robie Street
Halifax, NS B3H 3C3
Canada
Tel: (902) 491-6382
Fax: (902) 420-5046
E-mail: timothy.fras...@smu.ca<mailto:timothy.fras...@smu.ca>
www.frasierlab.ca<http://www.frasierlab.ca>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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