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  4. Ancient Female Philopatry, Asymmetric Male Gene Flow, And Synchronous Population Expansion Support The Influence Of Climatic Oscillations On The Evolution Of South American Sea Lion (Otaria Flavescens)
 
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Ancient Female Philopatry, Asymmetric Male Gene Flow, And Synchronous Population Expansion Support The Influence Of Climatic Oscillations On The Evolution Of South American Sea Lion (Otaria Flavescens)

Date Issued
2017-06-27
Author(s)
Sepúlveda, Maritza  
Facultad de Ciencias  
Larissa Rosa de Oliveira
Marcelo Gehara
Lúcia Darsie Fraga
Fernando Lopes
Juan Ignacio Túnez
Marcelo H. Cassini
Patrícia Majluf
Susana Cárdenas‐Alayza
Héctor Pavés
Enrique A. Crespo
Néstor A. García
Rocío Loizaga de Castro
A. Rus Hoelzel
Carlos Olavarría
Victor Hugo Valiati
Renato A. Quiñones
María José Pérez‐Álvarez
Philipp Sebastian Ott
Sandro L. Bonatto
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0179442
WoS ID
WOS:000404541500011
Abstract
The South American sea lion (Otaria flavescens) is widely distributed along the southern Atlantic and Pacific coasts of South America with a history of significant commercial exploitation. We aimed to evaluate the population genetic structure and the evolutionary history of South American sea lion along its distribution by analyses of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and 10 nuclear microsatellites loci. We analyzed 147 sequences of mtDNA control region and genotyped 111 individuals of South American sea lion for 10 microsatellite loci, representing six populations (Peru, Northern Chile, Southern Chile, Uruguay (Brazil), Argentina and Falkland (Malvinas) Islands) and covering the entire distribution of the species. The mtDNA phylogeny shows that haplotypes from the two oceans comprise two very divergent clades as observed in previous studies, suggesting a long period (>1 million years) of low inter-oceanic female gene flow. Bayesian analysis of bi-parental genetic diversity supports significant (but less pronounced than mitochondrial) genetic structure between Pacific and Atlantic populations, although also suggested some inter-oceanic gene flow mediated by males. Higher male migration rates were found in the intra-oceanic population comparisons, supporting very high female philopatry in the species. Demographic analyses showed that populations from both oceans went through a large population expansion ~10,000 years ago, suggesting a very similar influence of historical environmental factors, such as the last glacial cycle, on both regions. Our results support the proposition that the Pacific and Atlantic populations of the South American sea lion should be considered distinct evolutionarily significant units, with at least two managements units in each ocean.
Subjects

Agricultural And Biol...

Biochemistry, Genetic...

Multidisciplinary Sci...

Medicine

OCDE Subjects

Medical And Health Sc...

Quartile (Date Issued)
Q2
License
acceso abierto
Open Science Path
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Product(s)
Mitochondrial genetic and microsatellites diversities in each locality: N number of individuals analyzed (averaged over loci for microsatellites); Hd, haplotype diversity; π, nucleotide diversity; H, number of haplotypes; K, average number of alleles; Ho, observed heterozygosity; He, expected heterozygosity.  
Pairwise microsatellite R<sub>ST</sub> (above diagonal) and mtDNA control region Φ<sub>ST</sub> distance values (below diagonal) between the six sampling areas. Negative values were adjusted to zero.  
Migration rates (%, standard error in parenthesis) between the six sampling areas along the South America based on microsatellite data.  

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