Impact of population bottlenecks on genetic variation and the importance of life-history; a case study of the northern elephant seal |
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Authors: | A. RUS HOELZEL |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological Sciences, Durham University, Durham DH1 3LE |
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Abstract: | This paper reviews some of the important factors related to the impact of population bottlenecks, using the northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostrus) as a case study for illustration. The northern elephant seal was hunted extensively in the 19th century and forced through a bottleneck of approximately 10–20 seals. All measures of molecular genetic variation show current levels for the northern elephant seal to be low. Levels of genetic variation were compared with expectations based on a simulation model that recapitulates demographic growth, based on age-specific data on reproduction and mortality. Predictions from the simulation model are then presented to illustrate the importance of differences in life-history strategy and skewed reproductive success. Either high reproductive skew (e.g. polygyny) or a low growth rate in a population can increase the impact of a bottleneck on molecular variation. Severe population bottlenecks can also disrupt aspects of developmental stability and thereby increase the fluctuating asymmetry and variability of quantitative traits. A comparison of skulls collected before and after the bottleneck showed this to have occurred for some elephant seal quantitative characters. |
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Keywords: | genetic diversity simulation models marine mammals |
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