Mitochondrial DNA structure and colony expansion dynamics of New Zealand fur seals (Arctocephalus forsteri) around Banks Peninsula
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Date
2016
Type
Journal Article
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Abstract
New Zealand fur seals are one of many pinniped species that
survived the commercial sealing of the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries in dangerously low numbers. After the enforcement of a
series of protection measures in the early twentieth century, New
Zealand fur seals began to recover from the brink of extinction.
We examined the New Zealand fur seal populations of Banks
Peninsula, South Island, New Zealand using the mitochondrial DNA control region. We identified a panmictic population structure around Banks Peninsula. The most abundant haplotype in the area showed a slight significant aggregated structure. The Horseshoe Bay colony showed the least number of shared haplotypes with other colonies, suggesting a different origin of recolonisation of this specific colony. The effective population size of the New Zealand fur seal population at Banks Peninsula was estimated at approximately 2500 individuals. The exponential population growth rate parameter for the area was 35, which
corresponds to an expanding population. In general, samples from
adjacent colonies shared 4.4 haplotypes while samples collected
from colonies separated by between five and eight bays shared
1.9 haplotypes. The genetic data support the spill-over dynamics
of colony expansion already suggested for this species.
Approximate Bayesian computations analysis suggests recolonisation
of the area from two main clades identified across New Zealand with a most likely admixture coefficient of 0.41 to form the Banks Peninsula population. Approximate Bayesian computations analysis estimated a founder population size of approximately 372 breeding individuals for the area, which then rapidly increased in size with successive waves of external recruitment. The population of fur seals in the area is probably in
the late phase of maturity in the colony expansion dynamic.
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© 2016 The Royal Society of New Zealand