Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to announce a new publication in Frontiers in Marine Science: 
Using Genome-Wide SNPs to Detect Structure in High-Diversity and Low-Divergence 
Populations of Severely Impacted Eastern Tropical Pacific Spinner (Stenella 
longirostris) and Pantropical Spotted Dolphins (S. attenuata).

Abstract:
Millions of spinner (Stenella longirostris) and pantropical spotted dolphins 
(Stenella attenuata) died since the 1960's as bycatch in tuna nets in the 
eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. Despite three decades of protection, they show 
little-to-no sign of recovery (although recent fisheries-independent abundance 
estimates are not available). In efforts to establish biologically meaningful 
management boundaries for recovery, endemic subspecies and multiple stocks have 
been proposed. However, genetic differentiation among most of these units has 
been difficult to identify, possibly due to low statistical power stemming from 
large historical abundances, ongoing gene flow, and recent divergence. We 
tested for genetic structure at multiple hierarchical levels by analyzing the 
largest dataset to date brought to bear on these questions. Single nucleotide 
polymorphisms (SNPs) were collected from nuclear DNA regions associated with 
the restriction enzyme site PstI from 72 spinner dolphins and 58 pantropical 
spotted dolphins using genotype-by-sequencing (GBS). Our results support the 
current subspecies for both species and indicate stock-level separation for 
Tres Marias spinner dolphins and the two offshore pantropical spotted dolphin 
stocks in this area. Although bycatch has been reduced to a small fraction of 
pre-protection levels, incidental mortality continues to impact these 
populations. Our results are important for the ongoing management and recovery 
of these highly-impacted pelagic dolphins in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean.

The article is online available as open access at:
http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2016.00253/full 
<http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2016.00253/full>

Kind regards,

Matt

===============================
Matthew S. Leslie Ph.D.

Secretary G. Wayne Clough Postdoctoral Research Fellow
(via the James Smithson Fellowship Program)
National Museum of Natural History
Smithsonian Institution

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