Genetic Connections: Seasonal Migration and Gene Flow in the Common Loon, Gavia immer.

Common loons, Gavia immer, comprise an interesting species with which to study the genetic link between seasonal migration and gene flow (or breeding site ‘migration’). Common Loons are long-lived, large piscivorous birds that breed in lakes of northern North America and Iceland. Loons are highly ph...

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Main Author: McMillan, Amy
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Commons at Buffalo State 2013
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Online Access:https://digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu/fall_forum/2013/Presentations/38
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spelling ftbuffalostateun:oai:digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu:fall_forum-1063 2023-05-15T16:50:53+02:00 Genetic Connections: Seasonal Migration and Gene Flow in the Common Loon, Gavia immer. McMillan, Amy 2013-10-31T18:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu/fall_forum/2013/Presentations/38 unknown Digital Commons at Buffalo State https://digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu/fall_forum/2013/Presentations/38 Faculty and Staff Research and Creativity Fall Forum text 2013 ftbuffalostateun 2022-05-02T06:03:38Z Common loons, Gavia immer, comprise an interesting species with which to study the genetic link between seasonal migration and gene flow (or breeding site ‘migration’). Common Loons are long-lived, large piscivorous birds that breed in lakes of northern North America and Iceland. Loons are highly philopatric and territorial in breeding areas and also seem to return to the same wintering area. They are subject to multiple threats during all stages of their life (e.g., mercury poisoning, lake acidification, oil spills, botulism). In this study >600 loon samples collected from throughout the range in North America were used to determine population structure using five polymorphic microsatellite loci. Loons breeding near the east coast were strongly differentiated from loons in the rest of the range. Loons west of New Hampshire and Quebec showed a significant level of differentiation. Loons breeding in Wisconsin and New York were genetically distinct from other populations as well. This pattern of genetic differentiation can be partially explained by seasonal migratory routes; birds wintering on the west coast and in the Gulf of Mexico overlap in breeding areas but this may not be true of eastern birds. Understanding population genetic structure and relationships of both wintering and breeding populations will provide information on the impacts of stressors to loon populations. These results may also inform population genetic studies of other migratory birds Text Iceland Digital Commons at Buffalo State
institution Open Polar
collection Digital Commons at Buffalo State
op_collection_id ftbuffalostateun
language unknown
description Common loons, Gavia immer, comprise an interesting species with which to study the genetic link between seasonal migration and gene flow (or breeding site ‘migration’). Common Loons are long-lived, large piscivorous birds that breed in lakes of northern North America and Iceland. Loons are highly philopatric and territorial in breeding areas and also seem to return to the same wintering area. They are subject to multiple threats during all stages of their life (e.g., mercury poisoning, lake acidification, oil spills, botulism). In this study >600 loon samples collected from throughout the range in North America were used to determine population structure using five polymorphic microsatellite loci. Loons breeding near the east coast were strongly differentiated from loons in the rest of the range. Loons west of New Hampshire and Quebec showed a significant level of differentiation. Loons breeding in Wisconsin and New York were genetically distinct from other populations as well. This pattern of genetic differentiation can be partially explained by seasonal migratory routes; birds wintering on the west coast and in the Gulf of Mexico overlap in breeding areas but this may not be true of eastern birds. Understanding population genetic structure and relationships of both wintering and breeding populations will provide information on the impacts of stressors to loon populations. These results may also inform population genetic studies of other migratory birds
format Text
author McMillan, Amy
spellingShingle McMillan, Amy
Genetic Connections: Seasonal Migration and Gene Flow in the Common Loon, Gavia immer.
author_facet McMillan, Amy
author_sort McMillan, Amy
title Genetic Connections: Seasonal Migration and Gene Flow in the Common Loon, Gavia immer.
title_short Genetic Connections: Seasonal Migration and Gene Flow in the Common Loon, Gavia immer.
title_full Genetic Connections: Seasonal Migration and Gene Flow in the Common Loon, Gavia immer.
title_fullStr Genetic Connections: Seasonal Migration and Gene Flow in the Common Loon, Gavia immer.
title_full_unstemmed Genetic Connections: Seasonal Migration and Gene Flow in the Common Loon, Gavia immer.
title_sort genetic connections: seasonal migration and gene flow in the common loon, gavia immer.
publisher Digital Commons at Buffalo State
publishDate 2013
url https://digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu/fall_forum/2013/Presentations/38
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Faculty and Staff Research and Creativity Fall Forum
op_relation https://digitalcommons.buffalostate.edu/fall_forum/2013/Presentations/38
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