Genetic analysis of Sea Turtle Populations in the western Atlantic Ocean with emphasis on the southeast United States

The purpose of this work was to define nesting populations of the loggerhead turtle, Caretta caretta, using molecular data. Over 200 samples from nesting females at locations in the Atlantic and Mediterranean were analyzed to determine their mitochondrial (mt) DNA genotypes. The data were then used to elucidate nesting population structure and phylogeographic patterns. The hypothesis tested was that loggerhead nesting assemblages constitute distinct reproductive populations and therefore genetically populations. A pattern of strong geographic structuring is considered to be consistent with natal homing behavior as a dominant mechanism guiding the reproductive migrations of this species. (Document has 3pp.)

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bowen, Brian, Bass, Anna
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: University of Florida, Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit 1998
Subjects:Biology, Aquaculture, genetic analysis, sea turtle, populations, Western Atlantic Ocean, Southeast United States, loggerhead turtle, Caretta caretta,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/18853
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-188532021-07-04T04:09:21Z Genetic analysis of Sea Turtle Populations in the western Atlantic Ocean with emphasis on the southeast United States Bowen, Brian Bass, Anna Biology Aquaculture genetic analysis sea turtle populations Western Atlantic Ocean Southeast United States loggerhead turtle Caretta caretta The purpose of this work was to define nesting populations of the loggerhead turtle, Caretta caretta, using molecular data. Over 200 samples from nesting females at locations in the Atlantic and Mediterranean were analyzed to determine their mitochondrial (mt) DNA genotypes. The data were then used to elucidate nesting population structure and phylogeographic patterns. The hypothesis tested was that loggerhead nesting assemblages constitute distinct reproductive populations and therefore genetically populations. A pattern of strong geographic structuring is considered to be consistent with natal homing behavior as a dominant mechanism guiding the reproductive migrations of this species. (Document has 3pp.) Research Work Order no. 115 Final Report 2021-06-24T14:57:25Z 2021-06-24T14:57:25Z 1998 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/18853 en application/pdf application/pdf University of Florida, Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit Gainesville, FL http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/963 108 2011-09-29 21:18:13 963 Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Biology
Aquaculture
genetic analysis
sea turtle
populations
Western Atlantic Ocean
Southeast United States
loggerhead turtle
Caretta caretta
Biology
Aquaculture
genetic analysis
sea turtle
populations
Western Atlantic Ocean
Southeast United States
loggerhead turtle
Caretta caretta
spellingShingle Biology
Aquaculture
genetic analysis
sea turtle
populations
Western Atlantic Ocean
Southeast United States
loggerhead turtle
Caretta caretta
Biology
Aquaculture
genetic analysis
sea turtle
populations
Western Atlantic Ocean
Southeast United States
loggerhead turtle
Caretta caretta
Bowen, Brian
Bass, Anna
Genetic analysis of Sea Turtle Populations in the western Atlantic Ocean with emphasis on the southeast United States
description The purpose of this work was to define nesting populations of the loggerhead turtle, Caretta caretta, using molecular data. Over 200 samples from nesting females at locations in the Atlantic and Mediterranean were analyzed to determine their mitochondrial (mt) DNA genotypes. The data were then used to elucidate nesting population structure and phylogeographic patterns. The hypothesis tested was that loggerhead nesting assemblages constitute distinct reproductive populations and therefore genetically populations. A pattern of strong geographic structuring is considered to be consistent with natal homing behavior as a dominant mechanism guiding the reproductive migrations of this species. (Document has 3pp.)
format monograph
topic_facet Biology
Aquaculture
genetic analysis
sea turtle
populations
Western Atlantic Ocean
Southeast United States
loggerhead turtle
Caretta caretta
author Bowen, Brian
Bass, Anna
author_facet Bowen, Brian
Bass, Anna
author_sort Bowen, Brian
title Genetic analysis of Sea Turtle Populations in the western Atlantic Ocean with emphasis on the southeast United States
title_short Genetic analysis of Sea Turtle Populations in the western Atlantic Ocean with emphasis on the southeast United States
title_full Genetic analysis of Sea Turtle Populations in the western Atlantic Ocean with emphasis on the southeast United States
title_fullStr Genetic analysis of Sea Turtle Populations in the western Atlantic Ocean with emphasis on the southeast United States
title_full_unstemmed Genetic analysis of Sea Turtle Populations in the western Atlantic Ocean with emphasis on the southeast United States
title_sort genetic analysis of sea turtle populations in the western atlantic ocean with emphasis on the southeast united states
publisher University of Florida, Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
publishDate 1998
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/18853
work_keys_str_mv AT bowenbrian geneticanalysisofseaturtlepopulationsinthewesternatlanticoceanwithemphasisonthesoutheastunitedstates
AT bassanna geneticanalysisofseaturtlepopulationsinthewesternatlanticoceanwithemphasisonthesoutheastunitedstates
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