Authors
Xiaodong Liu, Suzanne Rønhøj Schjøtt, Sandra M Granquist, Aqqalu Rosing‐Asvid, Rune Dietz, Jonas Teilmann, Anders Galatius, Kristina Cammen, Greg O’Corry‐Crowe, Karin Harding, Tero Härkönen, Ailsa Hall, Emma L Carroll, Yumi Kobayashi, Mike Hammill, Garry Stenson, Anne Kirstine Frie, Christian Lydersen, Kit M Kovacs, Liselotte W Andersen, Joseph I Hoffman, Simon J Goodman, Filipe G Vieira, Rasmus Heller, Ida Moltke, Morten Tange Olsen
Publication date
2022/3
Journal
Molecular Ecology
Volume
31
Issue
6
Pages
1682-1699
Description
The harbour seal (Phoca vitulina) is the most widely distributed pinniped, occupying a wide variety of habitats and climatic zones across the Northern Hemisphere. Intriguingly, the harbour seal is also one of the most philopatric seals, raising questions as to how it colonized its current range. To shed light on the origin, remarkable range expansion, population structure and genetic diversity of this species, we used genotyping‐by‐sequencing to analyse ~13,500 biallelic single nucleotide polymorphisms from 286 individuals sampled from 22 localities across the species’ range. Our results point to a Northeast Pacific origin of the harbour seal, colonization of the North Atlantic via the Canadian Arctic, and subsequent stepping‐stone range expansions across the North Atlantic from North America to Europe, accompanied by a successive loss of genetic diversity. Our analyses further revealed a deep divergence between …
Total citations
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