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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
1. Previous genetic studies found evidence of at least three distinct groups of black‐browed
Thalassarche melanophris and Campbell Thalassarche impavida albatrosses in the Southern
Ocean. Almost 350 individuals including samples from additional breeding sites on the Falkland
Islands and South Georgia Island were screened using mitochondrial DNA.
2. The new sequence data using lineage specific PCR primers provided further support for the
taxonomic split of T. melanophris and T. impavida and separate management of the two distinct
T. melanophris groups.
3. In total, 207 black‐browed albatrosses killed in longline fisheries were screened. Approximately
93% of the bycaught birds from the Falkland Islands belonged to the Falkland mtDNA group
and the remaining birds had mtDNA from the Widespread T. melanophris group; these proportions
were similar to those in the local Falklands breeding population. The South African and
South Georgia bycatch samples predominantly comprised the Widespread T. melanophris
group, with only one bird from each area containing Falkland mtDNA. Lastly, 81% of the
albatrosses bycaught off New Zealand had T. impavida mtDNA and the remaining four birds
were Widespread T. melanophris. These differences in bycatch composition matched what
is known from tracking and banding data about the at‐sea distribution of black‐browed
albatrosses.
4. Based on the mtDNA results and current population trends, consideration should be given to
assigning regional IUCN status for the different breeding populations.
Description
Keywords
Albatross Fisheries Incidental bycatch Population structure Seabird conservation Southern ocean
Citation
Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems, 27, 1156-1163. Doi: 10.1002/aqc.2765
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons