Rapid response of a marine mammal species to Holocene climate and habitat change

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dc.contributor.author De Bruyn, Mark
dc.contributor.author Hall, Brenda L.
dc.contributor.author Chauke, Lucas Floid
dc.contributor.author Baroni, Carlo
dc.contributor.author Koch, Paul L.
dc.contributor.author Hoelzel, A. Rus
dc.date.accessioned 2010-04-06T07:15:42Z
dc.date.available 2010-04-06T07:15:42Z
dc.date.issued 2009-07
dc.description.abstract Environmental change drives demographic and evolutionary processes that determine diversity within and among species. Tracking these processes during periods of change reveals mechanisms for the establishment of populations and provides predictive data on response to potential future impacts, including those caused by anthropogenic climate change. Here we show how a highly mobile marine species responded to the gain and loss of new breeding habitat. Southern elephant seal, Mirounga leonina, remains were found along the Victoria Land Coast (VLC) in the Ross Sea, Antarctica, 2,500 km from the nearest extant breeding site on Macquarie Island (MQ). This habitat was released after retreat of the grounded ice sheet in the Ross Sea Embayment 7,500–8,000 cal YBP, and is within the range of modern foraging excursions from the MQ colony. Using ancient mtDNA and coalescent models, we tracked the population dynamics of the now extinct VLC colony and the connectivity between this and extant breeding sites. We found a clear expansion signal in the VLC population ,8,000 YBP, followed by directional migration away from VLC and the loss of diversity at ,1,000 YBP, when sea ice is thought to have expanded. Our data suggest that VLC seals came initially from MQ and that some returned there once the VLC habitat was lost, ,7,000 years later. We track the founder-extinction dynamics of a population from inception to extinction in the context of Holocene climate change and present evidence that an unexpectedly diverse, differentiated breeding population was founded from a distant source population soon after habitat became available. en
dc.identifier.citation De Bruyn, M, Hall, BL, Chauke, LF, Baroni, C, Koch, PL & Hoelzel, AR 2009, 'Rapid response of a marine mammal species to Holocene climate and habitat change', PLoS Genetics, vol. 5, no. 7. [http://www.plosgenetics.org] en
dc.identifier.issn 1553-7390
dc.identifier.other 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000554
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/13804
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Public Library of Science en
dc.rights © 2009 de Bruyn et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. en
dc.subject Holocene climate en
dc.subject.lcsh Marine mammals -- Habitat -- Antarctica en
dc.subject.lcsh Species diversity -- Antarctica en
dc.subject.lcsh Seals -- Variation -- Antarctica en
dc.subject.lcsh Animal breeding -- Antarctica en
dc.subject.lcsh Southern elephant seal -- Reproduction -- Climatic factors -- Antarctica en
dc.title Rapid response of a marine mammal species to Holocene climate and habitat change en
dc.type Article en


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