John Bannister
Australian Museum
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Featured researches published by John Bannister.
Molecular Ecology | 2000
Howard C. Rosenbaum; Robert L. Brownell; Moira W. Brown; Catherine M. Schaeff; V. Portway; Bradley N. White; S. Malik; L. A. Pastene; N. J. Patenaude; C. S. Baker; M. Goto; Peter B. Best; Phillip J. Clapham; Philip K. Hamilton; Michael J. Moore; R. Payne; V. Rowntree; C. T. Tynan; John Bannister; Robert DeSalle
Few studies have examined systematic relationships of right whales (Eubalaena spp.) since the original species descriptions, even though they are one of the most endangered large whales. Little morphological evidence exists to support the current species designations for Eubalaena glacialis in the northern hemisphere and E. australis in the southern hemisphere. Differences in migratory behaviour or antitropical distribution between right whales in each hemisphere are considered a barrier to gene flow and maintain the current species distinctions and geographical populations. However, these distinctions between populations have remained controversial and no study has included an analysis of all right whales from the three major ocean basins. To address issues of genetic differentiation and relationships among right whales, we have compiled a database of mitochondrial DNA control region sequences from right whales representing populations in all three ocean basins that consist of: western North Atlantic E. glacialis, multiple geographically distributed populations of E. australis and the first molecular analysis of historical and recent samples of E. glacialis from the western and eastern North Pacific Ocean. Diagnostic characters, as well as phylogenetic and phylogeographic analyses, support the possibility that three distinct maternal lineages exist in right whales, with North Pacific E. glacialis being more closely related to E. australis than to North Atlantic E. glacialis. Our genetic results provide unequivocal character support for the two usually recognized species and a third distinct genetic lineage in the North Pacific under the Phylogenetic Species Concept, as well as levels of genetic diversity among right whales world‐wide.
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2001
Robert D. McCauley; Curt Jenner; John Bannister; Douglas H. Cato
Throughout 2000, aerial surveys, boat‐based studies and acoustical censusing was carried out to search for blue whales in the Rottnest trench, west of Perth. Historical records indicated a Western Australian population of blue whales, while a preliminary boat survey in 1994 suggested a Rottnest trench aggregation. This was confirmed in 2000, with 17 blue whales sighted. Of 5000 acoustic records almost all contained blue whale calling, some having up to nine distinct callers. Although of a different format, the calls had a similar character to those described from other populations. A call was composed of three signals, each respectively 44–45 s, 20–23 s and 20–25 s in length, separated by 5–10 s and 23 s with the sequence repeated every 78 s. Each component was dominated by constant or slowly up‐sweeping amplitude‐modulated tones over 18–26 Hz, with harmonics evident up to 100 Hz and a secondary pulsed source of frequency 65–66 Hz present. Components had different source levels. Several other baleen whale...
Heredity | 2018
Emma L. Carroll; Rachael Alderman; John Bannister; Martine Bérubé; Peter B. Best; Laura J. Boren; C. S. Baker; Rochelle Constantine; K. Findlay; Robert G. Harcourt; L. Lemaire; Per J. Palsbøll; Nathalie J. Patenaude; V. J. Rowntree; J. Seger; Debbie Steel; L. O. Valenzuela; M. Watson; Oscar E. Gaggiotti
Understanding how dispersal and gene flow link geographically separated the populations over evolutionary history is challenging, particularly in migratory marine species. In southern right whales (SRWs, Eubalaena australis), patterns of genetic diversity are likely influenced by the glacial climate cycle and recent history of whaling. Here we use a dataset of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences (n = 1327) and nuclear markers (17 microsatellite loci, n = 222) from major wintering grounds to investigate circumpolar population structure, historical demography and effective population size. Analyses of nuclear genetic variation identify two population clusters that correspond to the South Atlantic and Indo-Pacific ocean basins that have similar effective breeder estimates. In contrast, all wintering grounds show significant differentiation for mtDNA, but no sex-biased dispersal was detected using the microsatellite genotypes. An approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) approach with microsatellite markers compared the scenarios with gene flow through time, or isolation and secondary contact between ocean basins, while modelling declines in abundance linked to whaling. Secondary-contact scenarios yield the highest posterior probabilities, implying that populations in different ocean basins were largely isolated and came into secondary contact within the last 25,000 years, but the role of whaling in changes in genetic diversity and gene flow over recent generations could not be resolved. We hypothesise that these findings are driven by factors that promote isolation, such as female philopatry, and factors that could promote dispersal, such as oceanographic changes. These findings highlight the application of ABC approaches to infer the connectivity in mobile species with complex population histories and, currently, low levels of differentiation.
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2007
C. Olavarría; C. Scott Baker; Claire Garrigue; Michael Poole; Nan Hauser; Susana Caballero; Lilián Flórez-González; Muriel Brasseur; John Bannister; Juan Capella; Phil Clapham; Rémi Dodemont; Michael Donoghue; Curt Jenner; N. Jenner; D. Moro; Marc Oremus; Dave Paton; Howard C. Rosenbaum; Kirsty Russell
Marine Mammal Science | 1998
C. S. Baker; Lilián Flórez-González; B. Abernethy; Howard C. Rosenbaum; R. W. Slade; Juan Capella; John Bannister
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2011
Emma L. Carroll; Nathalie J. Patenaude; Alana Alexander; Debbie Steel; Robert G. Harcourt; Simon Childerhouse; S Smith; John Bannister; Rochelle Constantine; C. S. Baker
Journal of Heredity | 2007
Nathalie J. Patenaude; Vicky A. Portway; C. M. Schaeff; John Bannister; Peter B. Best; R. Payne; Vicky Rowntree; Mariana Rivarola; C. Scott Baker
Archive | 2001
Peter B. Best; John Bannister; Robert L. Brownell; Gregory P. Donovan
Diversity and Distributions | 2013
Leigh G. Torres; Tim D. Smith; Phil Sutton; Alison MacDiarmid; John Bannister; Tomio Miyashita
Marine Mammal Science | 1999
John Bannister; L. A. Pastene; S. R. Burnell