4.5 Article

Molecular ecology meets remote sensing: environmental drivers to population structure of humpback dolphins in the Western Indian Ocean

Journal

HEREDITY
Volume 107, Issue 4, Pages 349-361

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/hdy.2011.21

Keywords

population structure; remote sensing; environmental drivers

Funding

  1. Golden Fund
  2. NASA
  3. Microsoft Corporation
  4. German Dolphin Conservation Society (Gesellschaft zur Rettung der Delphine e.V.)
  5. Natural History Museum of Eduardo Mondlane University in Maputo
  6. Texas A&M University at Galveston
  7. Research Grant Council (RGC) Hong Kong
  8. WWF Sweden
  9. The Ford Environmental Grants
  10. The UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office
  11. Shell Marketing Oman
  12. Petroleum Development Oman
  13. Veritas Geophysical
  14. The Peter Scott Trust for Education and Research in Conservation
  15. Emirates Airlines
  16. Salalah Port Services
  17. DHL Worldwide Express
  18. Truck Oman
  19. Oman Air
  20. Muscat Pharmacy
  21. KPMG
  22. Han-Padron and Associates
  23. Marina Bandar al Rowdah

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Genetic analyses of population structure can be placed in explicit environmental contexts if appropriate environmental data are available. Here, we use high-coverage and high-resolution oceanographic and genetic sequence data to assess population structure patterns and their potential environmental influences for humpback dolphins in the Western Indian Ocean. We analyzed mitochondrial DNA data from 94 dolphins from the coasts of South Africa, Mozambique, Tanzania and Oman, employing frequency-based and maximum-likelihood algorithms to assess population structure and migration patterns. The genetic data were combined with 13 years of remote sensing oceanographic data of variables known to influence cetacean dispersal and population structure. Our analyses show strong and highly significant genetic structure between all putative populations, except for those in South Africa and Mozambique. Interestingly, the oceanographic data display marked environmental heterogeneity between all sampling areas and a degree of overlap between South Africa and Mozambique. Our combined analyses therefore suggest the occurrence of genetically isolated populations of humpback dolphins in areas that are environmentally distinct. This study highlights the utility of molecular tools in combination with high-resolution and high-coverage environmental data to address questions not only pertaining to genetic population structure, but also to relevant ecological processes in marine species. Heredity (2011) 107, 349-361; doi:10.1038/hdy.2011.21; published online 23 March 2011

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