Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to share with you our latest paper on South African Bryde's
whales:

Paynee, D., Vermeulen, E., Penry, G., Elwen, S., Matthee, C., Andreotti,
S., Bloomer, P. 2026.  Low genetic diversity and regional isolation of
South Africa’s inshore Bryde’s whales. Conservation Genetics 27:26.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10592-025-01749-4

*Abstract*:
Effective conservation of cryptic marine species depends on a sound
understanding of genetic diversity, population structure and connectivity.
These data allow for the delineation of conservation units and assessment
of extinction risk and are especially valuable for species with fragmented
distributions or suspected regional endemism. The Bryde’s whale
(Balaenoptera edeni) exemplifies a challenge, being a poorly understood
baleen whale species globally, with a complex of resident inshore and
migratory offshore populations across temperate and sub-tropical waters.
One such is the inshore population that inhabits South African coastal
waters, where it is classified nationally as Vulnerable (D1) due to its
small population size. This study uses a panel of 14 microsatellite markers
and mitochondrial DNA control region sequences to advance our
understanding of the genetic isolation and extinction risk of this
population, informing the delineation of conservation units and
guiding population-specific management actions. Results indicate that this
population is characterized by moderate nuclear microsatellite and low
mitochondrial DNA diversity, and preliminarily indicate genetic
differentiation between populations in the southern African region. On a
global scale, the findings show differentiation between broad ocean regions
and the SAi while supporting the difference in evolutionary origin of SAi
and SEA. These findings underscore the need for active
conservation management for this isolated coastal population since they
provide genetic evidence for the recognition of a discrete management unit.
It is recommended that further refinement in understanding of the
population’s evolutionary distinctiveness will strengthen conservation
assessments, support listing decisions, and guide targeted management
interventions.

The paper is available at
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10592-025-01749-4?utm_source=rct_congratemailt&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nonoa_20260203&utm_content=10.1007%2Fs10592-025-01749-4


With kind regards,

Dominique and Els - on behalf of all the co-authors

A/Prof Els Vermeulen

Manager and Chief Scientist - Whale Unit

Mammal Research Institute

Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences

University of Pretoria, South Africa

+27 (0)60 9714301 / [email protected]

https://www.mammalresearchinstitute.science/whale-unit

“For the love of whales, for the future of our oceans”

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Please refer to 
http://upnet.up.ac.za/services/it/documentation/docs/004167.pdf 
<http://upnet.up.ac.za/services/it/documentation/docs/004167.pdf> for
full 
details.
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