Whole genome resequencing reveals diagnostic markers for investigating global migration and hybridization between minke whale species
Ketil Malde, Bj{\o}rghild B. Seliussen, Mar\'ia Quintela, Geir Dahle,, Fran\c{c}ois Besnier, Hans J. Skaug, Nils {\O}ien, Hiroko K. Solvang, Tore, Haug, Rasmus Skern-Mauritzen, Naohisa Kanda, Luis A. Pastene, Inge Jonassen, and Kevin A. Glover

TL;DR
This study used whole genome resequencing to develop diagnostic genetic markers that can identify and differentiate minke whale species and subspecies, aiding in understanding their migration and hybridization patterns globally.
Contribution
It introduces a novel set of diagnostic SNP markers and a genotyping platform for minke whales, enabling accurate detection of hybrids and inter-oceanic contact.
Findings
Identified fixed or nearly fixed SNPs among minke whale species.
Validated markers can detect hybrids up to three generations.
Developed a publicly available genetic reference dataset.
Abstract
Background: In the marine environment, where there are few absolute physical barriers, contemporary contact between previously isolated species can occur across great distances, and in some cases, may be inter-oceanic. [..] in the minke whale species complex [...] migrations [..] have been documented and fertile hybrids and back-crossed individuals between both species have also been identified. However, it is not known whether this represents a contemporary event, potentially driven by ecosystem changes in the Antarctic, or a sporadic occurrence happening over an evolutionary time-scale. We successfully used whole genome resequencing to identify a panel of diagnostic SNPs which now enable us address this evolutionary question. Results: A large number of SNPs displaying fixed or nearly fixed allele frequency differences among the minke whale species were identified from the sequence…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
