Migration, Dispersal, and Gene Flow of Harvested Aquatic Species in the Canadian Arctic

Migration occurs when key aspects of the life cycle such as growth, reproduction, or maintenance cannot all be completed in one location. The Arctic habitats are variable and Arctic species are often migratory. The predictable nature of migrations in both space and time allow Arctic people to harves...

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Main Author: Tallman, Ross F.
Other Authors: Matthews, Cory J.D., Moore, Jean-Sebastien, Hussey, Nigel E., Ferguson, Steven H., Marcoux, Marianne, Harris, Les N., Martin, Zoya A., Howland, Kimberly L.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openresearchlibrary.org/viewer/cfeca49f-f36f-4514-9de2-6643b448a8c3
https://openresearchlibrary.org/ext/api/media/cfeca49f-f36f-4514-9de2-6643b448a8c3/assets/external_content.pdf
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author Tallman, Ross F.
author2 Matthews, Cory J.D.
Moore, Jean-Sebastien
Hussey, Nigel E.
Ferguson, Steven H.
Marcoux, Marianne
Harris, Les N.
Martin, Zoya A.
Howland, Kimberly L.
author_facet Tallman, Ross F.
author_sort Tallman, Ross F.
collection Open Research Library
description Migration occurs when key aspects of the life cycle such as growth, reproduction, or maintenance cannot all be completed in one location. The Arctic habitats are variable and Arctic species are often migratory. The predictable nature of migrations in both space and time allow Arctic people to harvest fishes and marine mammals. We describe migratory/dispersal behavior in four types of taxa from the Canadian Arctic: anadromous and freshwater fishes, marine fishes, marine invertebrates, and marine mammals. Patterns of migration are remarkably different between these groups, in particular between distances migrated, seasonal timing of migrations, and the degree of reproductive isolation. Migratory anadromous and freshwater fishes become adapted to specific locations resulting in complex life histories and intra- and inter-population variation. Marine mammals not only migrate longer distances but also appear to have distinct demographic populations over large scales. Marine fishes tend to be panmictic, probably due to the absence of barriers that would restrict gene flow. Migratory patterns also reflect feeding or rearing areas and/or winter refugia. Migratory patterns of harvested aquatic organisms in the Canadian north are extremely variable and have shaped the north in terms of harvest, communities, and culture.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
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spelling ftopenresearchl:oai:biblioboard.com:cfeca49f-f36f-4514-9de2-6643b448a8c3 2025-01-16T20:09:40+00:00 Migration, Dispersal, and Gene Flow of Harvested Aquatic Species in the Canadian Arctic Tallman, Ross F. Matthews, Cory J.D. Moore, Jean-Sebastien Hussey, Nigel E. Ferguson, Steven H. Marcoux, Marianne Harris, Les N. Martin, Zoya A. Howland, Kimberly L. 2020-01-01T00:00:00Z application/pdf https://openresearchlibrary.org/viewer/cfeca49f-f36f-4514-9de2-6643b448a8c3 https://openresearchlibrary.org/ext/api/media/cfeca49f-f36f-4514-9de2-6643b448a8c3/assets/external_content.pdf English eng https://openresearchlibrary.org/viewer/cfeca49f-f36f-4514-9de2-6643b448a8c3 https://openresearchlibrary.org/ext/api/media/cfeca49f-f36f-4514-9de2-6643b448a8c3/assets/external_content.pdf https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode MODID-6d55e02e354:IntechOpen Technology & Engineering / Agriculture bisacsh:TEC003000 CHAPTER 2020 ftopenresearchl 2023-06-11T22:28:37Z Migration occurs when key aspects of the life cycle such as growth, reproduction, or maintenance cannot all be completed in one location. The Arctic habitats are variable and Arctic species are often migratory. The predictable nature of migrations in both space and time allow Arctic people to harvest fishes and marine mammals. We describe migratory/dispersal behavior in four types of taxa from the Canadian Arctic: anadromous and freshwater fishes, marine fishes, marine invertebrates, and marine mammals. Patterns of migration are remarkably different between these groups, in particular between distances migrated, seasonal timing of migrations, and the degree of reproductive isolation. Migratory anadromous and freshwater fishes become adapted to specific locations resulting in complex life histories and intra- and inter-population variation. Marine mammals not only migrate longer distances but also appear to have distinct demographic populations over large scales. Marine fishes tend to be panmictic, probably due to the absence of barriers that would restrict gene flow. Migratory patterns also reflect feeding or rearing areas and/or winter refugia. Migratory patterns of harvested aquatic organisms in the Canadian north are extremely variable and have shaped the north in terms of harvest, communities, and culture. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Open Research Library Arctic
spellingShingle Technology & Engineering / Agriculture
bisacsh:TEC003000
Tallman, Ross F.
Migration, Dispersal, and Gene Flow of Harvested Aquatic Species in the Canadian Arctic
title Migration, Dispersal, and Gene Flow of Harvested Aquatic Species in the Canadian Arctic
title_full Migration, Dispersal, and Gene Flow of Harvested Aquatic Species in the Canadian Arctic
title_fullStr Migration, Dispersal, and Gene Flow of Harvested Aquatic Species in the Canadian Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Migration, Dispersal, and Gene Flow of Harvested Aquatic Species in the Canadian Arctic
title_short Migration, Dispersal, and Gene Flow of Harvested Aquatic Species in the Canadian Arctic
title_sort migration, dispersal, and gene flow of harvested aquatic species in the canadian arctic
topic Technology & Engineering / Agriculture
bisacsh:TEC003000
topic_facet Technology & Engineering / Agriculture
bisacsh:TEC003000
url https://openresearchlibrary.org/viewer/cfeca49f-f36f-4514-9de2-6643b448a8c3
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