Data from: Population structure and historical demography of South American sea lions provide insights into the catastrophic decline of a marine mammal population
Understanding the causes of population decline is crucial for conservation management. We therefore used genetic analysis both to provide baseline data on population structure and to evaluate hypotheses for the catastrophic decline of the South American sea lion (Otaria flavescens) at the Falkland I...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding the causes of population decline is crucial for conservation
management. We therefore used genetic analysis both to provide baseline
data on population structure and to evaluate hypotheses for the
catastrophic decline of the South American sea lion (Otaria flavescens) at
the Falkland Islands (Malvinas) in the South Atlantic. We genotyped 259
animals from 23 colonies across the Falklands at 281 bp of the
mitochondrial hypervariable region and 22 microsatellites. A weak
signature of population structure was detected, genetic diversity was
moderately high in comparison with other pinniped species, and no evidence
was found for the decline being associated with a strong demographic
bottleneck. By combining our mitochondrial data with published sequences
from Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru, we also uncovered strong
maternally directed population structure across the geographical range of
the species. In particular, very few shared haplotypes were found between
the Falklands and South America, and this was reflected in correspondingly
low migration rate estimates. These findings do not support the prominent
hypothesis that the decline was caused by migration to Argentina, where
large-scale commercial harvesting operations claimed over half a million
animals. Thus, our study not only provides baseline data for conservation
management but also reveals the potential for genetic studies to shed
light upon long-standing questions pertaining to the history and fate of
natural populations. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.d826h |