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High connectivity in a long-lived high-Arctic seabird,the ivory gull <Emphasis Type="Italic">Pagophila eburnea</Emphasis>
Authors:Glenn Yannic  Roberto Sermier  Christophe Dufresnes  Olivier Gilg  Adrian Aebischer  Maria V Gavrilo  Hallvard Strøm  Mark L Mallory  R I Guy Morrison  H Grant Gilchrist  Thomas Broquet
Institution:1.Département de Biologie,Université Laval,Quebec,Canada;2.Canada Research Chair in Polar and Boreal Ecology, Department of Biology,Université de Moncton,Moncton,Canada;3.Groupe de Recherche en Ecologie Arctique (GREA),Francheville,France;4.School of Biology and Environmental Science,University College Dublin,Belfield, Dublin,Ireland;5.Department of Ecology and Evolution,University of Lausanne,Lausanne,Switzerland;6.Laboratoire Biogéosciences, UMR CNRS 5561, Equipe Ecologie Evolutive,Université de Bourgogne,Dijon,France;7.Museum of Natural History,Fribourg,Switzerland;8.National Park Russian Arctic,Archangelsk,Russia;9.Joint Directorate of Taimyr Nature Reserves,Norilsk,Russia;10.Norwegian Polar Institute, Fram Centre,Troms?,Norway;11.Department of Biology,Acadia University,Wolfville,Canada;12.Environment Canada,National Wildlife Research Centre,Ottawa,Canada;13.Environment Canada, National Wildlife Research Centre and Department of Biology,Carleton University,Ottawa,Canada;14.CNRS, Team Diversity and Connectivity of Coastal Marine Landscapes,Roscoff,France;15.UMR 7144,Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Univ Paris 06,Roscoff,France;16.LECA - Laboratoire d’Ecologie Alpine - CNRS UMR 5553,Université Savoie Mont Blanc,Le Bourget-Du-Lac Cedex,France
Abstract:Species may cope with rapid habitat changes by distribution shifts or adaptation to new conditions. A common feature of these responses is that they depend on how the process of dispersal connects populations, both demographically and genetically. We analyzed the genetic structure of a near-threatened high-Arctic seabird, the ivory gull (Pagophila eburnea) in order to infer the connectivity among gull colonies. We analyzed 343 individuals sampled from 16 localities across the circumpolar breeding range of ivory gulls, from northern Russia to the Canadian Arctic. To explore the roles of natal and breeding dispersal, we developed a population genetic model to relate dispersal behavior to the observed genetic structure of worldwide ivory gull populations. Our key finding is the striking genetic homogeneity of ivory gulls across their entire distribution range. The lack of population genetic structure found among colonies, in tandem with independent evidence of movement among colonies, suggests that ongoing effective dispersal is occurring across the Arctic Region. Our results contradict the dispersal patterns generally observed in seabirds where species movement capabilities are often not indicative of dispersal patterns. Model predictions show how natal and breeding dispersal may combine to shape the genetic homogeneity among ivory gull colonies separated by up to 2800 km. Although field data will be key to determine the role of dispersal for the demography of local colonies and refine the respective impacts of natal versus breeding dispersal, conservation planning needs to consider ivory gulls as a genetically homogeneous, Arctic-wide metapopulation effectively connected through dispersal.
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