Demographic Reconstruction of Antarctic Fur Seals Supports the Krill Surplus Hypothesis
Hoffman J, Chen R, Vendrami D, Paijmans A, Dasmahapatra KK, Forcada J (2022)
Genes 13(3): 541.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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genes-13-00541.pdf
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Autor*in
Hoffman, JosephUniBi ;
Chen, RebeccaUniBi ;
Vendrami, DavidUniBi ;
Paijmans, AnnekeUniBi ;
Dasmahapatra, Kanchon K.;
Forcada, Jaume
Einrichtung
Abstract / Bemerkung
Much debate surrounds the importance of top-down and bottom-up effects in the Southern Ocean, where the harvesting of over two million whales in the mid twentieth century is thought to have produced a massive surplus of Antarctic krill. This excess of krill may have allowed populations of other predators, such as seals and penguins, to increase, a top-down hypothesis known as the ‘krill surplus hypothesis’. However, a lack of pre-whaling population baselines has made it challenging to investigate historical changes in the abundance of the major krill predators in relation to whaling. Therefore, we used reduced representation sequencing and a coalescent-based maximum composite likelihood approach to reconstruct the recent demographic history of the Antarctic fur seal, a pinniped that was hunted to the brink of extinction by 18th and 19th century sealers. In line with the known history of this species, we found support for a demographic model that included a substantial reduction in population size around the time period of sealing. Furthermore, maximum likelihood estimates from this model suggest that the recovered, post-sealing population at South Georgia may have been around two times larger than the pre-sealing population. Our findings lend support to the krill surplus hypothesis and illustrate the potential of genomic approaches to shed light on long-standing questions in population biology.
Stichworte
Arctocephalus gazella;
Antarctic fur seal;
RAD sequencing;
demographic modelling;
bottleneck;
krill surplus hypothesis;
marine mammal;
baleen whales;
pinniped
Erscheinungsjahr
2022
Zeitschriftentitel
Genes
Band
13
Ausgabe
3
Art.-Nr.
541
Urheberrecht / Lizenzen
eISSN
2073-4425
Finanzierungs-Informationen
Open-Access-Publikationskosten wurden durch die Universität Bielefeld gefördert.
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2961869
Zitieren
Hoffman J, Chen R, Vendrami D, Paijmans A, Dasmahapatra KK, Forcada J. Demographic Reconstruction of Antarctic Fur Seals Supports the Krill Surplus Hypothesis. Genes. 2022;13(3): 541.
Hoffman, J., Chen, R., Vendrami, D., Paijmans, A., Dasmahapatra, K. K., & Forcada, J. (2022). Demographic Reconstruction of Antarctic Fur Seals Supports the Krill Surplus Hypothesis. Genes, 13(3), 541. https://doi.org/10.3390/genes13030541
Hoffman, Joseph, Chen, Rebecca, Vendrami, David, Paijmans, Anneke, Dasmahapatra, Kanchon K., and Forcada, Jaume. 2022. “Demographic Reconstruction of Antarctic Fur Seals Supports the Krill Surplus Hypothesis”. Genes 13 (3): 541.
Hoffman, J., Chen, R., Vendrami, D., Paijmans, A., Dasmahapatra, K. K., and Forcada, J. (2022). Demographic Reconstruction of Antarctic Fur Seals Supports the Krill Surplus Hypothesis. Genes 13:541.
Hoffman, J., et al., 2022. Demographic Reconstruction of Antarctic Fur Seals Supports the Krill Surplus Hypothesis. Genes, 13(3): 541.
J. Hoffman, et al., “Demographic Reconstruction of Antarctic Fur Seals Supports the Krill Surplus Hypothesis”, Genes, vol. 13, 2022, : 541.
Hoffman, J., Chen, R., Vendrami, D., Paijmans, A., Dasmahapatra, K.K., Forcada, J.: Demographic Reconstruction of Antarctic Fur Seals Supports the Krill Surplus Hypothesis. Genes. 13, : 541 (2022).
Hoffman, Joseph, Chen, Rebecca, Vendrami, David, Paijmans, Anneke, Dasmahapatra, Kanchon K., and Forcada, Jaume. “Demographic Reconstruction of Antarctic Fur Seals Supports the Krill Surplus Hypothesis”. Genes 13.3 (2022): 541.
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2022-03-21T06:23:16Z
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