Data from: Genetic data reveal mixed-stock aggregations of gray whales in the North Pacific Ocean
Gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) in the Western Pacific are critically endangered whereas in the Eastern Pacific they are relatively common. Holocene environmental changes and commercial whaling reduced their numbers, but gray whales in the Eastern Pacific now outnumber their Western counterparts...
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Zusammenfassung: | Gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) in the Western Pacific are critically
endangered whereas in the Eastern Pacific they are relatively common.
Holocene environmental changes and commercial whaling reduced their
numbers, but gray whales in the Eastern Pacific now outnumber their
Western counterparts by more than 100-fold. Herein, we investigate the
genetic diversity and population structure within the species using a
panel of genic SNPs. Results indicate the gray whale gene pool is
differentiated into two substocks containing similar levels of genetic
diversity, and that both our Eastern and Western geographic samples
represent mixed-stock aggregations. Ongoing or future gene flow between
the stocks may conserve genetic diversity overall but admixture has
implications for conservation of the critically endangered Western gray
whale. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.954ht26 |