Abstract

The sometimes-distant association between dispersal movements and mating strategies may govern seabird ecology. Despite their large dispersal capability, pelagic seabirds are subject to the influence of physical and non-physical barriers that may limit the magnitude of realized effective dispersal and gene flow. The Magnificent Frigatebird (Fregata magnificens) is a widespread, tropical, pelagic, sequentially monogamous seabird capable to breach physical barriers, such as land masses. Nevertheless, Mexican frigatebirds have shown movement preferences by sex (female migration and high male site fidelity), which, along with the complex female mate choice behavior, may promote breeding isolation. In order to ascertain if levels of population structure are influenced by physical or non-physical barriers, we analyzed mitochondrial DNA variation of adult Magnificent Frigatebirds breeding in the main nesting colonies in Mexico, three in the eastern Pacific Ocean and one in the Caribbean Sea. Control region sequences revealed significant genetic structure between Pacific and Caribbean frigatebirds (AMOVA, ΦSC = 0.105, P < 0.0001), but none among Pacific breeding colonies (non-significant pairwise ΦST). Whereas the C-haplotype was shared by Pacific and Caribbean frigatebirds, the T-haplotype was absent in the Caribbean. Genetic differentiation between ocean basins and available evidence of Mexican frigatebird movements suggest that in spite of the capability of frigatebirds to breach physical barriers, movement preferences by sex and mate selection acting in a large inter-oceanic scale are the prime behaviors promoting population structure, which is highly consequential for their conservation.

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