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Extensive sampling of polar bears (Ursus maritimus) in the Northwest Passage (Canadian Arctic Archipelago) reveals population differentiation across multiple spatial and temporal scales
Authors:Leonardo Campagna  Peter J Van Coeverden de Groot  Brenda L Saunders  Stephen N Atkinson  Diana S Weber  Markus G Dyck  Peter T Boag  Stephen C Lougheed
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Queen's University, , Kingston, Ontario, Canada, K7L 3N6;2. División de Ornitología, Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia”, , Buenos Aires, Argentina, C1405DJR;3. , Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, R3L 1K3;4. Division of Natural Sciences, New College of Florida, , Sarasota, Florida;5. Department of Environment, Government of Nunavut, , Igloolik, Nunavut, Canada, X0A 0L0
Abstract:As global warming accelerates the melting of Arctic sea ice, polar bears (Ursus maritimus) must adapt to a rapidly changing landscape. This process will necessarily alter the species distribution together with population dynamics and structure. Detailed knowledge of these changes is crucial to delineating conservation priorities. Here, we sampled 361 polar bears from across the center of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago spanning the Gulf of Boothia (GB) and M'Clintock Channel (MC). We use DNA microsatellites and mitochondrial control region sequences to quantify genetic differentiation, estimate gene flow, and infer population history. Two populations, roughly coincident with GB and MC, are significantly differentiated at both nuclear (FST = 0.01) and mitochondrial (ΦST = 0.47; FST = 0.29) loci, allowing Bayesian clustering analyses to assign individuals to either group. Our data imply that the causes of the mitochondrial and nuclear genetic patterns differ. Analysis of mtDNA reveals the matrilineal structure dates at least to the Holocene, and is common to individuals throughout the species’ range. These mtDNA differences probably reflect both genetic drift and historical colonization dynamics. In contrast, the differentiation inferred from microsatellites is only on the scale of hundreds of years, possibly reflecting contemporary impediments to gene flow. Taken together, our data suggest that gene flow is insufficient to homogenize the GB and MC populations and support the designation of GB and MC as separate polar bear conservation units. Our study also provide a striking example of how nuclear DNA and mtDNA capture different aspects of a species demographic history.
Keywords:Conservation genetics  DNA microsatellites  marine mammals  mark‐recapture  mitochondrial DNA  species at risk
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