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Population differentiation of the A frican cyprinid B arbus neumayeri across dissolved oxygen regimes
Author(s) -
Harniman Robert,
Merritt Thomas J. S.,
Chapman Lauren J.,
Lesbarrères David,
Martinez Mery L.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.561
Subject(s) - population , ecology , biology , oxygen , hypoxia (environmental) , genetic structure , swamp , genetic variation , chemistry , gene , genetics , demography , organic chemistry , sociology
Population level response to hypoxia has become an issue of global significance because of increased frequency and intensity of hypoxic events worldwide, and the potential for global warming to exacerbate hypoxic stress. In this study, we sequenced two nuclear intronic regions and a single mitochondrial region across seven populations of the A frican cyprinid, B arbus neumayeri from two river drainages in U ganda: the R wembaita S wamp‐ N juguta R iver S ystem and the D ura R iver. We then examined two indices of population structure, G ST and J ost's D , to detect links between oxygen availability and genetic variation and to determine if population genetic structure was associated with (i) dissolved oxygen regime (hypoxia or normoxia), (ii) geographical distance, or (iii) a combination of dissolved oxygen regime and geographical distance. Our results indicate that over a large scale (between drainages), geographical distance significantly affects the genetic structure of populations. However, within a single drainage, dissolved oxygen regime plays a key role in determining the genetic structure of populations. Within the R wembaita‐ N juguta system, gene flow was high between locations of similar oxygen regimes, but low between areas characterized by divergent oxygen regimes. Interestingly, G ST analyses appear to yield less realistic measures of population structure than J ost's D , suggesting that caution must be taken when interpreting and comparing the results from different studies. These results support the idea that aquatic dissolved oxygen can act as a selective force limiting gene flow among populations of aquatic species and therefore should be considered when implementing conservation plans and assessing environmental impact of human activities.

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