Alter S Elizabeth, Meyer Matthias, Post Klaas, Czechowski Paul, Gravlund Peter, Gaines Cork, Rosenbaum Howard C, Kaschner Kristin, Turvey Samuel T, van der Plicht Johannes, Shapiro Beth, Hofreiter Michael
Department of Biology, York College, City University of New York, 94-20 Guy R. Brewer Blvd, Jamaica, NY, 11415, USA; CUNY Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY, 10016, USA; American Museum of Natural History, Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, 79th St and Central Park West, New York, NY, 10024, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2015 Apr;24(7):1510-22. doi: 10.1111/mec.13121. Epub 2015 Mar 9.
Arctic animals face dramatic habitat alteration due to ongoing climate change. Understanding how such species have responded to past glacial cycles can help us forecast their response to today's changing climate. Gray whales are among those marine species likely to be strongly affected by Arctic climate change, but a thorough analysis of past climate impacts on this species has been complicated by lack of information about an extinct population in the Atlantic. While little is known about the history of Atlantic gray whales or their relationship to the extant Pacific population, the extirpation of the Atlantic population during historical times has been attributed to whaling. We used a combination of ancient and modern DNA, radiocarbon dating and predictive habitat modelling to better understand the distribution of gray whales during the Pleistocene and Holocene. Our results reveal that dispersal between the Pacific and Atlantic was climate dependent and occurred both during the Pleistocene prior to the last glacial period and the early Holocene immediately following the opening of the Bering Strait. Genetic diversity in the Atlantic declined over an extended interval that predates the period of intensive commercial whaling, indicating this decline may have been precipitated by Holocene climate or other ecological causes. These first genetic data for Atlantic gray whales, particularly when combined with predictive habitat models for the year 2100, suggest that two recent sightings of gray whales in the Atlantic may represent the beginning of the expansion of this species' habitat beyond its currently realized range.
由于持续的气候变化,北极动物面临着剧烈的栖息地改变。了解这些物种如何应对过去的冰川周期有助于我们预测它们对当今气候变化的反应。灰鲸是可能受到北极气候变化强烈影响的海洋物种之一,但由于缺乏关于大西洋已灭绝种群的信息,对过去气候对该物种影响的全面分析变得复杂。虽然对大西洋灰鲸的历史或它们与现存太平洋种群的关系知之甚少,但历史时期大西洋种群的灭绝归因于捕鲸。我们结合了古代和现代DNA、放射性碳年代测定和预测性栖息地建模,以更好地了解更新世和全新世期间灰鲸的分布。我们的结果表明,太平洋和大西洋之间的扩散取决于气候,发生在末次冰期之前的更新世以及白令海峡开通后的全新世早期。在密集商业捕鲸时期之前的很长一段时间里,大西洋的遗传多样性下降,这表明这种下降可能是由全新世气候或其他生态原因引起的。这些关于大西洋灰鲸的首批遗传数据,特别是与2100年的预测性栖息地模型相结合时,表明最近在大西洋两次发现灰鲸可能代表该物种栖息地超出其当前实际范围开始扩张。