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Journal Article

Museum specimens of a landlocked pinniped reveal recent loss of genetic diversity and unexpected population connections

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Översti,  Sanni       
tide, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Max Planck Society;

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Heino_Museum_EcoEvo_2023.pdf
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Heino_Museum_EcoEvo_Suppl5_2023.docx
(Supplementary material), 15KB

Heino_Museum_EcoEvo_Suppl4_2023.docx
(Supplementary material), 27KB

Heino_Museum_EcoEvo_Suppl1_2023.pdf
(Supplementary material), 766KB

Heino_Museum_EcoEvo_Suppl3_2023.pdf
(Supplementary material), 516KB

Heino_Museum_EcoEvo_Suppl2_2023.pdf
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Citation

Heino, M. T., Nyman, T., Palo, J. U., Harmoinen, J., Valtonen, M., Pilot, M., et al. (2023). Museum specimens of a landlocked pinniped reveal recent loss of genetic diversity and unexpected population connections. Ecology and Evolution, 13(1): e9720. doi:10.1002/ece3.9720.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000C-B189-1
Abstract
The Saimaa ringed seal (Pusa hispida saimensis) is endemic to Lake Saimaa in Finland. The subspecies is thought to have originated when parts of the ringed seal population of the Baltic region were trapped in lakes emerging due to postglacial bedrock rebound around 9000 years ago. During the 20th century, the population experienced a drastic human-induced bottleneck. Today encompassing a little over 400 seals with extremely low genetic diversity, it is classified as endangered. We sequenced sections of the mitochondrial control region from 60 up to 125-years-old museum specimens of the Saimaa ringed seal. The generated dataset was combined with publicly available sequences. We studied how genetic variation has changed through time in this subspecies and how it is phylogenetically related to other ringed seal populations from the Baltic Sea, Lake Ladoga, North America, Svalbard, and the White Sea. We observed temporal fluctuations in haplotype frequencies and loss of haplotypes accompanied by a recent reduction in female effective population size. In apparent contrast with the traditionally held view of the Baltic origin of the population, the Saimaa ringed seal mtDNA variation also shows affinities to North American ringed seals. Our results suggest that the Saimaa ringed seal has experienced recent genetic drift associated with small population size. The results further suggest that extant Baltic ringed seal is not representative of the ancestral population of the Saimaa ringed seal, which calls for re-evaluation of the deep history of this subspecies.