| Literature DB >> 36043283 |
Jordi Salmona1, Julia Dayon1,2, Emilie Lecompte1, Alexandros A Karamanlidis3, Alex Aguilar4, Pablo Fernandez de Larrinoa5, Rosa Pires6, Giulia Mo7, Aliki Panou8, Sabrina Agnesi7, Asunción Borrell4, Erdem Danyer9, Bayram Öztürk9,10, Arda M Tonay9,10, Anastasios K Anestis8, Luis M González11, Panagiotis Dendrinos3, Philippe Gaubert1.
Abstract
Disentangling the impact of Late Quaternary climate change from human activities can have crucial implications on the conservation of endangered species. We investigated the population genetics and demography of the Mediterranean monk seal (Monachus monachus), one of the world's most endangered marine mammals, through an unprecedented dataset encompassing historical (extinct) and extant populations from the eastern North Atlantic to the entire Mediterranean Basin. We show that Cabo Blanco (Western Sahara/Mauritania), Madeira, Western Mediterranean (historical range) and Eastern Mediterranean regions segregate into four populations. This structure is probably the consequence of recent drift, combined with long-term isolation by distance (R2 = 0.7), resulting from prevailing short-distance (less than 500 km) and infrequent long-distance dispersal (less than 1500 km). All populations (Madeira especially), show high levels of inbreeding and low levels of genetic diversity, seemingly declining since historical time, but surprisingly not being impacted by the 1997 massive die-off in Cabo Blanco. Approximate Bayesian Computation analyses support scenarios combining local extinctions and a major effective population size decline in all populations during Antiquity. Our results suggest that the early densification of human populations around the Mediterranean Basin coupled with the development of seafaring techniques were the main drivers of the decline of Mediterranean monk seals.Entities:
Keywords: Mediterranean monk seal; demographic history; genetic diversity; isolation by distance; marine mammals; population decline
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36043283 PMCID: PMC9428542 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.0846
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.530