Population genetics of species on the genera Tursiops and Delphinus within the Gulf of California and along the western coast of Baja California

This present study investigated the evolution of population genetic structure of two closely related cetacean species, bottlenose (Tursiops truncatus) and common dolphins (Delphinus spp.) within the Gulf of California (GC) and along the West Coast of Baja California. In this study, we found evidence...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Segura-Garcia, Iris Haydee
Published: Durham University 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.529635
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-529635
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5296352015-03-20T04:48:06ZPopulation genetics of species on the genera Tursiops and Delphinus within the Gulf of California and along the western coast of Baja CaliforniaSegura-Garcia, Iris Haydee2011This present study investigated the evolution of population genetic structure of two closely related cetacean species, bottlenose (Tursiops truncatus) and common dolphins (Delphinus spp.) within the Gulf of California (GC) and along the West Coast of Baja California. In this study, we found evidence of strong genetic differentiation in both bottlenose and common dolphin populations in the absence of physical barriers. The comparison of the patterns of population genetic differentiation found here for bottlenose and common dolphins supports the hypothesis of local habitat dependence and resource specialization at both the population and putative species level. Fine-geographic scale structure was detected in coastal bottlenose dolphins, which seemed to be strongly associated to the biogeographic subdivision of the Gulf of California and western coast of Baja California. This result suggests that gene flow among bottlenose dolphin coastal populations might be restricted by local dependence on diverse ecological conditions. In contrast, the long-beaked common dolphin genetic structure did not reflect the habitat heterogeneity of the region to the same extent. The difference in foraging specialization between coastal and offshore populations of both bottlenose and common dolphins is reflected in the pattern of genetic structure observed at a broader geographic scale. Overall, the results support the hypothesis that local habitat dependence promotes population differentiation in the absence of physical boundaries to dispersal in these highly mobile species. This study provides an unusual insight into the conditions that lead to incipient speciation in these groups. Divergence among common dolphin populations appears to be associated with changes in the paleoceanographic conditions of the region to the extent that reciprocal monophyly between the sympatric D. delphis and D. capensis forms has evolved within the Holocene timeframe.576.58Durham Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.529635http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/592/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 576.58
spellingShingle 576.58
Segura-Garcia, Iris Haydee
Population genetics of species on the genera Tursiops and Delphinus within the Gulf of California and along the western coast of Baja California
description This present study investigated the evolution of population genetic structure of two closely related cetacean species, bottlenose (Tursiops truncatus) and common dolphins (Delphinus spp.) within the Gulf of California (GC) and along the West Coast of Baja California. In this study, we found evidence of strong genetic differentiation in both bottlenose and common dolphin populations in the absence of physical barriers. The comparison of the patterns of population genetic differentiation found here for bottlenose and common dolphins supports the hypothesis of local habitat dependence and resource specialization at both the population and putative species level. Fine-geographic scale structure was detected in coastal bottlenose dolphins, which seemed to be strongly associated to the biogeographic subdivision of the Gulf of California and western coast of Baja California. This result suggests that gene flow among bottlenose dolphin coastal populations might be restricted by local dependence on diverse ecological conditions. In contrast, the long-beaked common dolphin genetic structure did not reflect the habitat heterogeneity of the region to the same extent. The difference in foraging specialization between coastal and offshore populations of both bottlenose and common dolphins is reflected in the pattern of genetic structure observed at a broader geographic scale. Overall, the results support the hypothesis that local habitat dependence promotes population differentiation in the absence of physical boundaries to dispersal in these highly mobile species. This study provides an unusual insight into the conditions that lead to incipient speciation in these groups. Divergence among common dolphin populations appears to be associated with changes in the paleoceanographic conditions of the region to the extent that reciprocal monophyly between the sympatric D. delphis and D. capensis forms has evolved within the Holocene timeframe.
author Segura-Garcia, Iris Haydee
author_facet Segura-Garcia, Iris Haydee
author_sort Segura-Garcia, Iris Haydee
title Population genetics of species on the genera Tursiops and Delphinus within the Gulf of California and along the western coast of Baja California
title_short Population genetics of species on the genera Tursiops and Delphinus within the Gulf of California and along the western coast of Baja California
title_full Population genetics of species on the genera Tursiops and Delphinus within the Gulf of California and along the western coast of Baja California
title_fullStr Population genetics of species on the genera Tursiops and Delphinus within the Gulf of California and along the western coast of Baja California
title_full_unstemmed Population genetics of species on the genera Tursiops and Delphinus within the Gulf of California and along the western coast of Baja California
title_sort population genetics of species on the genera tursiops and delphinus within the gulf of california and along the western coast of baja california
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2011
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.529635
work_keys_str_mv AT seguragarciairishaydee populationgeneticsofspeciesonthegeneratursiopsanddelphinuswithinthegulfofcaliforniaandalongthewesterncoastofbajacalifornia
_version_ 1716786743998414848