Restricted gene flow for gadus macrocephalus from yellow sea based on microsatellite markers: Geographic block of tsushima current

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Abstract

The Pacific cod Gadus macrocephalus is a demersal, economically important fish in the family Gadidae. Population genetic differentiation of Pacific cod was examined across its northwestern Pacific range by screening variation of eight microsatellite loci in the present study. All four populations exhibited high genetic diversity. Pairwise fixation index (Fst) suggested a moderate to high level of genetic differentiation among populations. Population of the Yellow Sea (YS) showed higher genetic difference compared to the other three populations based on the results of pairwise Fst, three-dimensional factorial correspondence analysis (3D-FCA) and STRUCTURE, which implied restricted gene flow among them. Wilcoxon signed rank tests suggested no significant heterozygosity excess and no recent genetic bottleneck events were detected. Microsatellite DNA is an effective molecular marker for detecting the phylogeographic pattern of Pacific cod, and these Pacific cod populations should be three management units.

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Song, N., Liu, M., Yanagimoto, T., Sakurai, Y., Han, Z. Q., & Gao, T. X. (2016). Restricted gene flow for gadus macrocephalus from yellow sea based on microsatellite markers: Geographic block of tsushima current. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 17(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms17040467

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