Publications
NIBIOs employees contribute to several hundred scientific articles and research reports every year. You can browse or search in our collection which contains references and links to these publications as well as other research and dissemination activities. The collection is continously updated with new and historical material.
2023
Lecture – ROBOGOLF results
Karin Juul Hesselsøe, Anne Friederike Borchert, Trond Olav Pettersen, ...
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Arne StensvandAbstract
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Arne StensvandAbstract
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Arne StensvandAbstract
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Arne Stensvand Natalia A. Peres David M. Gadoury Belachew Asalf Tadesse Aruppillai SuthaparanAbstract
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Melanie Furrer Sara A. Meier Maxime Jan Paul Franken Monica Alterskjær Sundset Steven A. Brown Gabriela Wagner Reto HuberAbstract
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Juliana D. Klein Simo Maduna Matthew L. Dicken Charlene Da Silva Michelle Soekoe Meaghen E. McCord Warren M. Potts Snorre Hagen Aletta E Bester-van der MerweAbstract
Adaptive divergence in response to environmental clines are expected to be common in species occupying heterogeneous environments. Despite numerous advances in techniques appropriate for non-model species, gene–environment association studies in elasmobranchs are still scarce. The bronze whaler or copper shark (Carcharhinus brachyurus) is a large coastal shark with a wide distribution and one of the most exploited elasmobranchs in southern Africa. Here, we assessed the distribution of neutral and adaptive genomic diversity in C. brachyurus across a highly heterogeneous environment in southern Africa based on genome-wide SNPs obtained through a restriction site-associated DNA method (3RAD). A combination of differentiation-based genome-scan (outflank) and genotype–environment analyses (redundancy analysis, latent factor mixed models) identified a total of 234 differentiation-based outlier and candidate SNPs associated with bioclimatic variables. Analysis of 26,299 putatively neutral SNPs revealed moderate and evenly distributed levels of genomic diversity across sites from the east coast of South Africa to Angola. Multivariate and clustering analyses demonstrated a high degree of gene flow with no significant population structuring among or within ocean basins. In contrast, the putatively adaptive SNPs demonstrated the presence of two clusters and deep divergence between Angola and all other individuals from Namibia and South Africa. These results provide evidence for adaptive divergence in response to a heterogeneous seascape in a large, mobile shark despite high levels of gene flow. These results are expected to inform management strategies and policy at the national and regional level for conservation of C. brachyurus populations.
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Anne MuolaAbstract
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