Molecular ecology and conservation genomics of scalloped (sphyrna lewini) and carolina hammerheads (s. gilberti)

Scalloped hammerheads (Sphyrna lewini) are a circumglobally distributed shark that has experienced declines in abundance throughout its range. Management of scalloped hammerheads in the U.S. Atlantic is a challenge due to the presence of Carolina hammerheads (S. gilberti), a recently discovered, co-...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barker, Amanda
Other Authors: Portnoy, David S., Bird, Christopher E., Grubbs, R. Dean, Smee, Delbert
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1969.6/89425
Description
Summary:Scalloped hammerheads (Sphyrna lewini) are a circumglobally distributed shark that has experienced declines in abundance throughout its range. Management of scalloped hammerheads in the U.S. Atlantic is a challenge due to the presence of Carolina hammerheads (S. gilberti), a recently discovered, co-distributed, cryptic species. The species are indistinguishable based on external morphology and can only be identified with genetics or precaudal vertebrae counts. Little is known about Carolina hammerheads, but they are thought to be less abundant than scalloped hammerheads and may have a more restricted range. Scalloped hammerhead stocks are considered overfished in the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) and are managed with great hammerheads (S. mokarran) and smooth hammerheads (S. zygaena) as the hammerhead shark complex. Carolina hammerheads are not currently considered in management plans, and data is needed regarding habitat use, distribution, and relative abundance of the species. In each chapter, molecular data is used to investigate questions relevant to the conservation and management of scalloped and Carolina hammerheads. Chapter two investigates hybridization between the species. First generation hybrids and backcrosses were found throughout the region in which the species area co-distributed. Carolina hammerheads were typically the mother of hybrids, and most instances of backcrossing were between an F1 and pure scalloped hammerhead. Chapter three describes the distribution and relative abundance of Carolina and scalloped hammerheads in the U.S. Atlantic and Gulf. Carolina hammerhead were more abundant than scalloped hammerheads in South Carolina, but less abundant in the U.S. Atlantic overall and were not present in the Gulf. Chapter four evaluates patterns of genetic variation between management units in the western North Atlantic. Significant structure was vi present between the North and central Atlantic, as well as within the central Atlantic. Chapter five examines the relative reproductive ...