New DNA sequencing-based research suggests that the humpback whales
currently living in the Arabian Sea have remained isolated from other
populations for roughly 70,000 years.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
A small,
non-migratory population of humpback whales in the Arabian Sea are currently on
the endangered list, according to the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. This
whale population may also remained isolated from interbreeding with other
humpback whales from geographically distinct locations for tens of thousands of
years.
Researchers
with the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) of the American Museum of Natural
History reported on
December 3 in the journal PLOS ONE that their comparison of both
mitochondrial and nuclear DNA samples taken from close to 70 Arabian Sea
humpback whales with DNA sequences from other whale populations of the North
Pacific and Southern Hemisphere showed strong distinctions. The differences are
strongly suggestive of an unusual, long-term isolation.
“The epic
seasonal migrations of humpbacks elsewhere are well known, so this small,
non-migratory population presents a wonderful and intriguing enigma,” said WCS
researcher and study co-author Tim Collins. “They also beg many questions: how
and why did the population originate, how does it persist, and how do their
behaviors differ from other humpback whales?”
Estimates
of gene flow and divergence suggest that the current population may have
originated in the Southern Indian Ocean some 70,000 years ago. The genetic
diversity values for these whales are significantly below those of humpbacks
residing in the Southern Hemisphere. If the results are accurate, the humpback
whales of the Arabian Sea are the most isolated population of its kind
worldwide.
The
authors of the study add that the Arabian Sea humpback faces low reproductive
prospects and threats from humankind and therefore, ought to be moved to
“Critically Endangered” status on the IUCN’s Red List.
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