Common dolphin ( Delphinus delphis) mitochondrial genomes from Senegal reveal geographic structure across the North Atlantic but provide no support for global long‐beaked clade

Abstract The common dolphin ( Delphinus delphis ) is a widely distributed species exhibiting extensive morphological diversity, with previous taxonomies recognizing multiple Delphinus species primarily based on relative beak length. We sequenced mitochondrial genomes of D. delphis morphotypes from m...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Mammal Science
Main Authors: Becker, Madeleine A., Murphy, Katherine R., Archer, Frederick I., Jefferson, Thomas A., Keith‐Diagne, Lucy W., Potter, Charles W., Urrutia‐Osorio, M. Fernanda, Ndong, Ibrahima, McGowen, Michael R.
Other Authors: Division of Ocean Sciences
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mms.13144
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/mms.13144
Description
Summary:Abstract The common dolphin ( Delphinus delphis ) is a widely distributed species exhibiting extensive morphological diversity, with previous taxonomies recognizing multiple Delphinus species primarily based on relative beak length. We sequenced mitochondrial genomes of D. delphis morphotypes from multiple regions, calculated mitogenome nucleotide diversity (π = 0.00504), dated Delphinus mitogenome diversification to 1.27 mya, and conducted phylogenetic and population‐level analyses focusing on morphotype and geographic origin. We present the first Delphinus sequencing data from Senegal, at the edge of where long‐ and short‐beaked dolphins co‐occur in the Atlantic, but only recovering stranded dolphins with long or indeterminate beak lengths. While we detected little genetic structure across most of the North Atlantic, fixation indices demonstrate that Senegalese dolphins are distinct. Geography did not reliably predict phylogeny, with few monophyletic localities, but we do infer a monophyletic group of long‐beaked dolphins from California, Peru, and possibly China. However, neither Senegalese long‐beaked dolphins nor long‐beaked D. d. tropicalis are closely related to Pacific long‐beaked dolphins, providing no support for a worldwide long‐beaked clade (formerly D. capensis ). Our findings reveal a distinctive Senegal Delphinus population and provide a foundation for global genomic analyses to further investigate the evolution of Delphinus morphotypes.