1963
DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1963.tb03258.x
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The Antitropical Factor in Cetacean Speciation

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Cited by 73 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…It is believed that the generic migratory pattern of large whales (feeding in higher latitudes during the summer months, and travelling to lower latitudes to calve and breed in the winter) serves as a relatively effective barrier to trans-equatorial gene flow [6], [7], leading towards reproductive isolation and ultimately speciation in each hemisphere. However, some species, like blue whales ( Balaenoptera musculus Linneaus, 1758) can be found near the equator either seasonally or year-round [49], and trans-equatorial migrations and movements between ocean basins have been observed in other species as well [50], [51].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It is believed that the generic migratory pattern of large whales (feeding in higher latitudes during the summer months, and travelling to lower latitudes to calve and breed in the winter) serves as a relatively effective barrier to trans-equatorial gene flow [6], [7], leading towards reproductive isolation and ultimately speciation in each hemisphere. However, some species, like blue whales ( Balaenoptera musculus Linneaus, 1758) can be found near the equator either seasonally or year-round [49], and trans-equatorial migrations and movements between ocean basins have been observed in other species as well [50], [51].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, some species, like blue whales ( Balaenoptera musculus Linneaus, 1758) can be found near the equator either seasonally or year-round [49], and trans-equatorial migrations and movements between ocean basins have been observed in other species as well [50], [51]. Changes in oceanographic conditions, such as cooling during Pleistocene glacial periods, could force anti-tropical forms closer together, increasing the likelihood of exchange [6]. These processes would be expected to produce a pattern in which anti-tropical pairs with a greater distributional hiatus near the equator are also more taxonomically divergent.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…North-south population pairs among large whales or taxon pairs among small cetaceans are typical (Davies 1963, Barnes 1985a. Cetacean diversity is highest in temperate latitudes and low in tropical and polar latitudes (Barnes 1977).…”
Section: Environmental Change and Paleozoogeographymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, inter and intra-specific differences between Atlantic and Pacific oceans are thought to have emerged by the formation of the Panama Land Bridge, ice barriers in the Arctic, or by differential environmental tolerance through the Arctic or the tropics [4], [5]. Conversely, periods of inter-glacial warming have allowed episodic contact between populations in the Southern and Northern Hemispheres over evolutionary time scales [6]. Barriers to dispersal have not fluctuated to the same extent throughout large parts of the Southern Hemisphere (SH) [7], and therefore populations of large migratory marine species in the SH may potentially show a higher degree of connectivity across ocean basins over evolutionary and demographic timeframes [8], [9].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%