クジラ亜種の遺伝的差異を発見(Sea More Species? Genetic Differences Discovered in Blue Whale Populations)

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2025-01-17 ゲーテ大学

ゲーテ大学フランクフルトの研究者らは、シロナガスクジラの全ゲノム解析を通じて、ナガスクジラ科の種間で遺伝的交流が過去に頻繁に行われていたことを明らかにしました。特に、シロナガスクジラとナガスクジラの間での交雑が確認されており、現在でもハイブリッド個体が観察されています。この研究は、クジラ類の進化と種分化の理解に新たな視点を提供し、保全戦略の策定にも寄与するものです。

<関連情報>

シロナガスクジラの海洋保全ゲノム解析から北半球の新亜種が示唆される Ocean-Wide Conservation Genomics of Blue Whales Suggest New Northern Hemisphere Subspecies

Magnus Wolf, Menno J. de Jong, Axel Janke
Molecular Ecology  Published: 17 December 2024
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.17619

クジラ亜種の遺伝的差異を発見(Sea More Species? Genetic Differences Discovered in Blue Whale Populations)

ABSTRACT

The blue whale is an endangered and globally distributed species of baleen whale with multiple described subspecies, including the morphologically and genetically distinct pygmy blue whale. North Atlantic and North Pacific populations, however, are currently regarded as a single subspecies despite being separated by continental land masses and acoustic call differences. To determine the degree of isolation among the Northern Hemisphere populations, 14 North Pacific and 6 Western Australian blue whale nuclear and mitochondrial genomes were sequenced and analysed together with 11 publicly available North Atlantic blue whale genomes. Population genomic analyses revealed distinctly differentiated clusters and limited genetic exchange among all three populations, indicating a high degree of isolation between the Northern Hemisphere populations. Nevertheless, the genomic and mitogenomic distances between all blue whale populations, including the Western Australian pygmy blue whale, are low when compared to other inter-subspecies distances in cetaceans. Given that the Western Australian pygmy blue whale is an already recognised subspecies and further supported by previously reported acoustic differences, a proposal is made to treat the two Northern Hemisphere populations as separate subspecies, namely Balaenoptera musculus musculus (North Atlantic blue whale) and Balaenoptera musculus sulfureus (North Pacific blue whale). Furthermore, a first molecular viability assessment of all three populations not only found a generally high genomic diversity among blue whales but also a lack of alleles at low frequency, non-neutral evolution and increased effects of inbreeding. This suggests a substantial anthropogenic impact on the genotypes of blue whales and calls for careful monitoring in future conservation plans.

生物環境工学
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