2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294x.2005.02664.x
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Population histories of right whales (Cetacea:Eubalaena) inferred from mitochondrial sequence diversities and divergences of their whale lice (Amphipoda:Cyamus)

Abstract: Right whales carry large populations of three 'whale lice' ( Cyamus ovalis , Cyamus gracilis , Cyamus erraticus ) that have no other hosts. We used sequence variation in the mitochondrial COI gene to ask (i) whether cyamid population structures might reveal associations among right whale individuals and subpopulations, (ii) whether the divergences of the three nominally conspecific cyamid species on North Atlantic, North Pacific, and southern right whales ( Eubalaena glacialis, Eubalaena japonica, Eubalaena au… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…The nucleotide diversity of cox1 was also consistently high within all krill swarms (p ¼ 0.010275-0.011537, Table 1). To our knowledge, only one previous study has found consistently high nucleotide diversity across populations (Cyamus ovalis; Kaliszewska et al, 2005), whereas several studies have reported much higher nucleotide diversity for individual populations, usually from samples of cryptic species or the products of incipient speciation followed by secondary contact (for example, brittle stars, Muths et al, 2009). The high Antarctic krill diversity values reported in this study are unlikely to be an artefact of sequencing error or the presence of numts, as our sequence reproducibility assessment and tests for numts effectively ruled out these possibilities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The nucleotide diversity of cox1 was also consistently high within all krill swarms (p ¼ 0.010275-0.011537, Table 1). To our knowledge, only one previous study has found consistently high nucleotide diversity across populations (Cyamus ovalis; Kaliszewska et al, 2005), whereas several studies have reported much higher nucleotide diversity for individual populations, usually from samples of cryptic species or the products of incipient speciation followed by secondary contact (for example, brittle stars, Muths et al, 2009). The high Antarctic krill diversity values reported in this study are unlikely to be an artefact of sequencing error or the presence of numts, as our sequence reproducibility assessment and tests for numts effectively ruled out these possibilities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…To model this variability, we followed the rationale and approach of Kaliszewska et al (2005), by generating a data partition from each alignment containing all third position sites augmented by the variable sites at the first position (data partitions A* and B*). DNA sequence variability in these data partitions was then evaluated for nucleotide homogeneity using tetrahedral plots and matched-pairs tests for symmetry (Ababneh et al, 2006) implemented in the software SeqVis v.1.3 (Ho et al, 2006).…”
Section: Dna Substitution Modellingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three species of right whale species are known (Rosenbaum et al, 2000;Gaines et al, 2005;Kaliszewska et al, 2005), including Eubalaena australis (Desmoulins, 1822), the southern right whale, and Eubalaena glacialis (Müller, 1776), the North Atlantic right whale.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Right whales are known to host three species of cyamids: Cyamus ovalis Roussel de Vauzème, 1834, Cyamus erraticus Roussel de Vauzème, 1834, and Cyamus gracilis Roussel de Vauzème, 1834 [15][16][17]. Each species has a different spatial distribution on the right whale's body [12,15,18].…”
Section: Open Accessmentioning
confidence: 99%