Dear MARMAM community,

Hello, I am Momoka Suzuki, PhD student in Kyoto University, Japan.
We, my co-authors and I, are pleased to inform you that we could reveal the 
ecotypes of killer whales around Hokkaido, Japan.
Here is the publication:

Momoka Suzuki,  Mami Kawai,  Takashi Hayakawa,  Yuki F. Kita,  Yu Sato,  Miho 
Inoue-Murayama,  Akira Shiozaki,  Shin Nishida,  Shimpei F. Hiruta,  Hiroshi 
Ohizumi,  Fumio Nakahara,  Shigeo Saino,  Yoshikazu Uni,  Ayaka T. Matsuda,  
Takashi F. Matsuishi,  Yuko Tajima,  Masao Amano,  Tadasu K. Yamada,  Motoi 
Yoshioka,  Yoko Mitani. (2025).Whole Mitochondrial Genome Analysis of Killer 
Whales Reveals the Presence of Resident and Transient Ecotypes Around Hokkaido. 
Marine Mammal Science, 42, e70107. https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.70107.

We are sorry, this article is not open acess.
However, here is the link for press release in English. 
https://www.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en/research-news/2025-12-26-0

ABSTRACT
In the North Pacific, there are at least three genetically different ecotypes 
of killer whales (Orcinus orca), referred to as resident, offshore, and 
transient. A previous study suggested that killer whales around Hokkaido belong 
to fish-eating (resident and/or offshore ecotypes) and mammal-eating (transient 
ecotype) groups. These results were supported by haplotypes based on the 
combination of 1193?bp of cytochrome b and 420?bp of the control region in 
mitochondrial genomes. However, this analysis was not sufficient to 
discriminate between resident and offshore ecotypes because of the short 
sequence lengths. In this study, we analyzed whole mitochondrial genomes of 25 
killer whales sampled around Hokkaido to clarify the ecotypes and mitochondrial 
genome haplotypes. Phylogenetic analysis revealed the presence of resident and 
transient ecotypes around Hokkaido. The whales identified as residents shared 
an identical haplotype, which is the most common haplotype in the western North 
Pacific. In contrast, the transients around Hokkaido exhibited eight 
haplotypes, including seven novel ones among the 19 individuals, and their 
haplotype richness was the highest among the North Pacific populations. This 
result suggests that the Hokkaido coast served as a refugium for transient 
killer whales during the Last Glacial Maximum.

Sincerely,
Momoka Suzuki


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Doctoral course, Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto 
University
Primatology and Wildlife Science leading graduate program
Kyoto University Division of Graduate Studies, SPRING Program
2-24 Tanaka-Sekiden-cho,
Sakyo, Kyoto, 606-8203, Japan
Wildlife Research Center, Kyoto University
E-mail: [email protected]
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