Quantifying patterns of genetic diversity and differentiation among populations of Arctic birds is fundamental for understanding past and ongoing population processes in the Arctic. However, the genetic differentiation of many important Arctic species remains uninvestigated. Here, phylogeography and population genetics were examined in the worldwide population of a small seabird, the little auk (dovekie, Alle alle)—the most numerous avian species of the Arctic ecosystem. Blood samples or feathers were collected from 328 little auks (325 from the nominate subspecies and 3 from the A. a. polaris) in nine main breeding aggregations in the northern Atlantic and one location from the Pacific Ocean. The mtDNA haplotypes of the two subspecies were not segregated into separate groups. Also, no genetic structure was found within the nominate race based on microsatellite markers. The level of genetic differentiation among populations was low yet significant (mean FST = 0.005). Some pairwise FST comparisons revealed significant differences, including those involving the most distant Pacific colony as well as among some Atlantic populations. Weak population differentiation following the model of isolation by distance in the little auk is similar to the patterns reported in other high-Arctic bird species, indicating that a lack of distinct genetic structure is a common phenomenon in the Arctic avifauna.
Weak population genetic differentiation in the most numerous Arctic seabird, the little auk
K. Wojczulanis‐Jakubas,Adrianna Kilikowska,A. Harding,D. Jakubas,N. Karnovsky,H. Steen,H. Strøm,J. Welcker,M. Gavrilo,J. Lifjeld,A. Johnsen
Published 2014 in Polar Biology
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- Publication year
2014
- Venue
Polar Biology
- Publication date
2014-01-30
- Fields of study
Biology, Environmental Science
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