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Early divergence and differential population histories of the Indo‐Pacific humpback dolphin in the Pacific and Indian Oceans
Author(s) -
ZHAO Liyuan,
SAKORNWIMON Watchara,
LIN Wenzhi,
ZHANG Peijun,
CHANTRA Rachawadee,
DAI Yufei,
AIERKEN Reyilamu,
WU Fuxing,
LI Songhai,
KITTIWATTANAWONG Kongkiat,
WANG Xianyan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
integrative zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.904
H-Index - 34
ISSN - 1749-4877
DOI - 10.1111/1749-4877.12527
Subject(s) - indo pacific , phylogeography , gene flow , bay , oceanography , geography , fishery , biology , population , humpback whale , phylogenetic tree , genetic diversity , geology , gene , demography , sociology , whale , biochemistry
The currently recognized Indo‐Pacific humpback dolphin occurs in estuaries and surrounding shallow waters from the South China Sea to the Asian coast of the Indian Ocean. However, a recent study suggested that the humpback dolphin from the Bay of Bengal may represent a distinct phylogenetic species. In this study, we sequenced 915‐bp mtDNA segments from five geographic populations in both Chinese and Thai waters; together with previously published sequences, these data revealed that the ancestral Indo‐Pacific humpback dolphin might have split during the transition from the Oligocene to Miocene (23.45 Mya, 95% HPD: 16.65–26.55 Mya), and then dispersed along the Pacific and Indian Ocean coasts of Asia. Genetic differentiation was detected between most of the examined populations, except for only a few pairwise populations in the northern South China Sea. Genetic differentiation/distance between the humpback dolphins from the northern and southern South China Sea met the sub‐species threshold value proposed for marine mammals, whereas that between the humpback dolphins in the Pacific and the Indian Ocean was above the species threshold. Bayesian inference of historic gene flow indicated low but constant northward gene flow along the Indian Ocean coast; however, there was a recent abrupt increase in gene flow in the Pacific region, likely due to the shortening coastline at the low stand of sea level. Our results revealed that the current taxonomic classification of Indo‐Pacific humpback dolphins may not reflect their phylogeography.

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