Authors
Alana Alexander, Debbie Steel, Kendra Hoekzema, Sarah L Mesnick, Daniel Engelhaupt, Iain Kerr, Roger Payne, C Scott Baker
Publication date
2016/6
Journal
Molecular ecology
Volume
25
Issue
12
Pages
2754-2772
Description
The interplay of natural selection and genetic drift, influenced by geographic isolation, mating systems and population size, determines patterns of genetic diversity within species. The sperm whale provides an interesting example of a long‐lived species with few geographic barriers to dispersal. Worldwide mtDNA diversity is relatively low, but highly structured among geographic regions and social groups, attributed to female philopatry. However, it is unclear whether this female philopatry is due to geographic regions or social groups, or how this might vary on a worldwide scale. To answer these questions, we combined mtDNA information for 1091 previously published samples with 542 newly obtained DNA profiles (394‐bp mtDNA, sex, 13 microsatellites) including the previously unsampled Indian Ocean, and social group information for 541 individuals. We found low mtDNA diversity (π = 0.430%) reflecting an …
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