PLoS ONE (Oct 2009)

Population structure of humpback whales from their breeding grounds in the South Atlantic and Indian Oceans.

  • Howard C Rosenbaum,
  • Cristina Pomilla,
  • Martin Mendez,
  • Matthew S Leslie,
  • Peter B Best,
  • Ken P Findlay,
  • Gianna Minton,
  • Peter J Ersts,
  • Timothy Collins,
  • Marcia H Engel,
  • Sandro L Bonatto,
  • Deon P G H Kotze,
  • Mike Meÿer,
  • Jaco Barendse,
  • Meredith Thornton,
  • Yvette Razafindrakoto,
  • Solange Ngouessono,
  • Michel Vely,
  • Jeremy Kiszka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007318
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 10
p. e7318

Abstract

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Although humpback whales are among the best-studied of the large whales, population boundaries in the Southern Hemisphere (SH) have remained largely untested. We assess population structure of SH humpback whales using 1,527 samples collected from whales at fourteen sampling sites within the Southwestern and Southeastern Atlantic, the Southwestern Indian Ocean, and Northern Indian Ocean (Breeding Stocks A, B, C and X, respectively). Evaluation of mtDNA population structure and migration rates was carried out under different statistical frameworks. Using all genetic evidence, the results suggest significant degrees of population structure between all ocean basins, with the Southwestern and Northern Indian Ocean most differentiated from each other. Effective migration rates were highest between the Southeastern Atlantic and the Southwestern Indian Ocean, followed by rates within the Southeastern Atlantic, and the lowest between the Southwestern and Northern Indian Ocean. At finer scales, very low gene flow was detected between the two neighbouring sub-regions in the Southeastern Atlantic, compared to high gene flow for whales within the Southwestern Indian Ocean. Our genetic results support the current management designations proposed by the International Whaling Commission of Breeding Stocks A, B, C, and X as four strongly structured populations. The population structure patterns found in this study are likely to have been influenced by a combination of long-term maternally directed fidelity of migratory destinations, along with other ecological and oceanographic features in the region.