“…This lack of genetic differentiation at a wide scale is consistent with the recent reports of genetic homogeneity of this species at a regional scale in the Indo‐Pacific (Ovenden, Kashiwagi, Broderick, Giles, & Salini, ; Taguchi, King, Wetklo, Withler, & Yokawa, ) and in the North Pacific (King et al., ), and at broad scale between Atlantic North and South and between Atlantic and Pacific (Verissimo et al., ) and between Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea (Leone et al., ; but only with mtDNA). This result is as well consistent with the broad‐scale panmixia reported for other widely distributed species, such as lemon sharks (Feldheim, Gruber, & Ashley, ; Schultz et al., ), scalloped hammerhead sharks ( Sphyrna lewini , Ovenden et al., ; Daly‐Engel et al., ), milk sharks ( Rhizoprionodon acutus , Ovenden et al., ), school sharks ( Galeorhinus galeus , Hernández et al., ) and basking sharks ( Cetorhinus maximus , Hoelzel, Shivji, Magnussen, & Francis, ).…”