DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTION OF MITOCHONDRIAL-DNA LINEAGES AMONG HUMPBACK WHALES, MEGAPTERA-NOVAEANGLIAE, IN THE MEXICAN PACIFIC-OCEAN

Citation
L. Medranogonzalez et al., DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTION OF MITOCHONDRIAL-DNA LINEAGES AMONG HUMPBACK WHALES, MEGAPTERA-NOVAEANGLIAE, IN THE MEXICAN PACIFIC-OCEAN, Canadian journal of zoology, 73(9), 1995, pp. 1735-1743
Citations number
52
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00084301
Volume
73
Issue
9
Year of publication
1995
Pages
1735 - 1743
Database
ISI
SICI code
0008-4301(1995)73:9<1735:DADOML>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
We investigated the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) diversity of humpback wh ales, Megaptera novaeangliae, wintering off the Mexican Pacific coast and the Revillagigedo Islands. We amplified and sequenced a variable f ragment of the mtDNA control region from skin samples of 65 whales and compared these with published sequences from whales in other regional habitats. Among the Mexican humpback whales, we distinguished eight h aplotypes differing by 0.31-3.75% along a consensus sequence length of 320 base pairs. A diagnostic restriction site outside the consensus s equence identified a ninth common haplotype. A phylogenetic reconstruc tion of the control region sequences revealed two main groupings: an A E group, which is common throughout the North Pacific, and a CF group, which is closely related to haplotypes from the southern hemisphere. We found a significant degree of geographic subdivision in the winteri ng grounds of the eastern North Pacific. Within Mexico, whales off the Revillagigedo Islands are weakly but significantly differentiated fro m those of the Mexican Pacific coast. Our data also suggest that mtDNA haplotypes are clinally distributed along the American Pacific coast and we hypothesize that the present distribution of these lineages amo ng humpback whales in the eastern North Pacific is probably associated with weather changes after the last glaciation.