Dear MARMAM readers,
 
We are happy to announce the publication of the following paper in Evolutionary 
Biology:
 
Stefania Gaspari, Aviad Scheinin, Draško Holcer,, Caterina Fortuna, Chiara 
Natali, Tilen Genov, Alexandros Frantzis, Guido Chelazzi, André E. Moura. 2015. 
 Drivers of population structure of the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) 
in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea
Abstract
The drivers of population differentiation in oceanic dispersal organisms have 
been crucial for research in evolutionary biology. Adaptation to different 
environments is commonly invoked as an alternative to geographic isolation, as 
a driver of differentiation in the oceans. In this study, we investigate the 
population structure and phylogeography of the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops 
truncatus) in the Mediterranean Sea, using microsatellite loci and the entire 
mtDNA control region. By further comparing the Mediterranean populations with 
the well described Atlantic populations, we addressed the following hypotheses: 
1) bottlenose dolphins show population structure within the environmentally 
complex Eastern Mediterranean Sea; 2) population structure was gained locally 
or otherwise results from chance distribution of pre-existing genetic 
structure; 3) strong demographic variations within the Mediterranean basin have 
affected genetic variation sufficiently to bias detected patterns of population 
structure. Our results suggest that bottlenose dolphin exhibits population 
structures that correspond well to the main Mediterranean basins. Furthermore, 
we found evidence for fine scale population division within the Adriatic and 
the Levantine seas. We further describe for the first time, a distinction 
between populations inhabiting pelagic and coastal regions within the 
Mediterranean. Phylogeographic analysis, suggests that current genetic 
structure results mostly from stochastic distribution of Atlantic genetic 
variation, resulting from a recent post-glacial expansion. Comparison with 
Atlantic mtDNA haplotypes, further suggest the existence of a metapopulation 
across North Atlantic/Mediterranean, with pelagic regions acting as source for 
coastal environments.

The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s11692-015-9309-8)

If you are unable to download the article, please contact me by email and I 
will be happy to send you a copy: stefaniagasp...@gmail.com

Best regards

Stefania Gaspari

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