Measuring population connectivity is a critical task in conservation biology. While genetic markers can provide reliable long-term historical estimates of population connectivity, scientists are still limited in their ability to determine contemporary patterns of gene flow, the most practical time frame for management. Here, we tackled this issue by developing a new approach that only requires juvenile sampling at a single time period. To demonstrate the usefulness of our method, we used the Speartooth shark (Glyphis glyphis), a critically endangered species of river sharks found only in tropical northern Australia and southern Papua New Guinea. Contemporary adult and juvenile shark movements, estimated with the spatial distribution of kin ...
Knowledge of population structure, connectivity and effective population size remains limited for ma...
Delineating the extent of connectivity for populations of marine megafauna and understanding the ele...
Despite international protection of white sharks Carcharodon carcharias, important conservation para...
Measuring population connectivity is a critical task in conservation biology. While genetic markers ...
Population genetics have been increasingly applied to study large sharks over the last decade. Whils...
With recent advances in sequencing technology, genomic data are changing how important conservation ...
Fishing represents a major problem for conservation of chondrichthyans, with a quarter of all specie...
BackgroundMitochondrial DNA markers have long been used to identify population boundaries and are no...
Knowledge of genetic connectivity dynamics in the world's large-bodied, highly migratory, apex preda...
Vagile, large-bodied marine organisms frequently have wide range dispersion but also dependence on c...
The Bull Shark (Carcharhinus leucas) faces varying levels of exploitation around the world due to it...
Globally, elasmobranch populations (sharks and rays) are declining due to increasing anthropogenic a...
Fishing represents a major problem for conservation of chondrichthyans, with a quarter of all specie...
WOS:000769834700001Analyses of genetic diversity can shed light on both the origins of biodiversity ...
Knowledge of population structure, connectivity and effective population size remains limited for ma...
Delineating the extent of connectivity for populations of marine megafauna and understanding the ele...
Despite international protection of white sharks Carcharodon carcharias, important conservation para...
Measuring population connectivity is a critical task in conservation biology. While genetic markers ...
Population genetics have been increasingly applied to study large sharks over the last decade. Whils...
With recent advances in sequencing technology, genomic data are changing how important conservation ...
Fishing represents a major problem for conservation of chondrichthyans, with a quarter of all specie...
BackgroundMitochondrial DNA markers have long been used to identify population boundaries and are no...
Knowledge of genetic connectivity dynamics in the world's large-bodied, highly migratory, apex preda...
Vagile, large-bodied marine organisms frequently have wide range dispersion but also dependence on c...
The Bull Shark (Carcharhinus leucas) faces varying levels of exploitation around the world due to it...
Globally, elasmobranch populations (sharks and rays) are declining due to increasing anthropogenic a...
Fishing represents a major problem for conservation of chondrichthyans, with a quarter of all specie...
WOS:000769834700001Analyses of genetic diversity can shed light on both the origins of biodiversity ...
Knowledge of population structure, connectivity and effective population size remains limited for ma...
Delineating the extent of connectivity for populations of marine megafauna and understanding the ele...
Despite international protection of white sharks Carcharodon carcharias, important conservation para...