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Inferring contemporary and historical genetic connectivity from juveniles
Authors:Pierre Feutry  Oliver Berry  Peter M Kyne  Richard D Pillans  Richard M Hillary  Peter M Grewe  James R Marthick  Grant Johnson  Rasanthi M Gunasekera  Nicholas J Bax  Mark Bravington
Institution:1. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Hobart, TAS, Australia;2. Research Institute for the Environment and Livelihoods, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, NT, Australia;3. CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere Indian Ocean Marine Research Centre, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA, Australia;4. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Dutton Park, QLD, Australia;5. Menzies Institute for Medical Research, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia;6. Department of Primary Industry and Fisheries, Aquatic Resource Research Unit, Darwin , NT, Australia;7. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Science, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia
Abstract:Measuring population connectivity is a critical task in conservation biology. While genetic markers can provide reliable long‐term historical estimates of population connectivity, scientists are still limited in their ability to determine contemporary patterns of gene flow, the most practical time frame for management. Here, we tackled this issue by developing a new approach that only requires juvenile sampling at a single time period. To demonstrate the usefulness of our method, we used the Speartooth shark (Glyphis glyphis), a critically endangered species of river shark found only in tropical northern Australia and southern Papua New Guinea. Contemporary adult and juvenile shark movements, estimated with the spatial distribution of kin pairs across and within three river systems, was contrasted with historical long‐term connectivity patterns, estimated from mitogenomes and genome‐wide SNP data. We found strong support for river fidelity in juveniles with the within‐cohort relationship analysis. Male breeding movements were highlighted with the cross‐cohort relationship analysis, and female reproductive philopatry to the river systems was revealed by the mitogenomic analysis. We show that accounting for juvenile river fidelity and female philopatry is important in population structure analysis and that targeted sampling in nurseries and juvenile aggregations should be included in the genomic toolbox of threatened species management.
Keywords:conservation biology     Glyphis glyphis     kinship  marine dispersal  philopatry  population structure  threatened species
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