Looking through glassfish: marine genetic structure in an estuarine species
Author(s) -
Courtenay E. Mills,
Wade L. Hadwen,
Jane Hughes
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
marine and freshwater research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.693
H-Index - 88
eISSN - 1448-6059
pISSN - 1323-1650
DOI - 10.1071/mf07215
Subject(s) - panmixia , biological dispersal , biology , genetic structure , phylogeography , isolation by distance , estuary , ecology , genetic diversity , population genetics , population , evolutionary biology , genetic variation , phylogenetics , genetics , gene , demography , sociology
Through the use of mitochondrial DNA (ATP8 gene), the prediction of intermediate genetic structuring was investigated in two species of estuarine glassfish (Ambassis marianus and Ambassis jacksoniensis) ( Perciformes : Ambassidae) to determine the possibility of a generalised 'estuarine' genetic structure. Individuals were collected from estuaries in eastern Australia between Tin Can Bay (Queensland) in the north and Kempsey ( New South Wales) in the south. Analysis of the haplotype frequencies found in this region suggested panmictic populations with star-like phylogenies with extremely high levels of genetic diversity, but with no correlation between geographic distance and genetic distance. Non-significant FST and Phi(ST) suggested extensive dispersal among estuaries. However, Tajima's D and Fu's F-S values suggest 'mutation-genetic drift equilibrium' has not been reached, and that population expansions occurring 262 000 (A. marianus) and 300 000 (A. jacksoniensis) years ago may obscure any phylogeographic structuring or isolation by distance. The finding of panmixia was contrary to the prediction of genetic structuring intermediate between that of marine fish (shallowly structured) and freshwater fish (highly structured), suggesting high dispersal capabilities in these species.Griffith Sciences, Griffith School of EnvironmentFull Tex
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