Evolutionary history of a Scottish harbour seal population

Author:

Nikolic Natacha12,Thompson Paul3,de Bruyn Mark4,Macé Matthias5,Chevalet Claude2

Affiliation:

1. ARBRE (Reunion Island Biodiversity Research Agency), Saint-Leu, La Réunion

2. Génétique Physiologie et Systèmes d’Elevage - UMR1388, INRAE, Castanet Tolosan, France

3. Lighthouse Field Station, Sciences School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Cromarty, United Kingdom

4. School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

5. Laboratoire d’Anthropologie Moléculaire et d’Imagerie de Synthèse - UMR 5288, CNRS, Toulouse, France

Abstract

Efforts to conserve marine mammals are often constrained by uncertainty over their population history. Here, we examine the evolutionary history of a harbour seal (Phoca vitulina) population in the Moray Firth, northeast Scotland using genetic tools and microsatellite markers to explore population change. Previous fine-scale analysis of UK harbour seal populations revealed three clusters in the UK, with a northeastern cluster that included our Moray Firth study population. Our analysis revealed that the Moray Firth cluster is an independent genetic group, with similar levels of genetic diversity across each of the localities sampled. These samples were used to assess historic abundance and demographic events in the Moray Firth population. Estimates of current genetic diversity and effective population size were low, but the results indicated that this population has remained at broadly similar levels following the population bottleneck that occurred after post-glacial recolonization of the area.

Funder

INRAE

Genotoul platform (FRANCE),

University of Aberdeen

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

Reference127 articles.

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4. A population on the edge: genetic diversity and population structure of the world’s northernmost harbour seals (Phoca vitulina);Anderse;Biological Journal of the Linnean Society,2011

5. Hasseln i Sverige fordom och nu;Andersson;Sveriges Geologiska Undersö kning Serie Ca,1902

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