Abstract
The population structure and evolutionary history of Mugil cephalus were investigated across 18 sampling sites in the NE Atlantic Ocean, Mediterranean and Black Seas, using 2 classes of genetic markers: sequence polymorphism of an 857 bp fragment of mitochondrial (mtDNA) cytochrome b, and allele size variation at 7 nuclear loci. The level of nucleotide diversity recovered with the mtDNA marker was very low (~0.6% divergence), indicating the presence of a single clade over the entire area. Mismatch distribution, Bayesian skyline plots and associated statistics revealed a recent demographic crash followed by population expansion, but nuclear data indicated population constancy in the area covered in this study. While a single clade was detected, significant mtDNA genetic differentiation was, however, observed between the samples from the Black Sea and the samples from other (sub-) basins (φST = 0.17; p = 0.029). The nuclear loci also revealed significant genetic differentiation and isolation-by-distance in M. cepha lus. Patterns of genetic structure were, however, significantly more pronounced with nuclear than with mtDNA markers; the former indicated the presence of 3 (Bayesian clustering) to 6 (Monmonnier's method) populations. The highest levels of genetic heterogeneity at nuclear markers occurred at the wellknown Almeria-Oran Front, but also in the Bosporus Strait. Thus, both sets of markers revealed the importance of this strait as a barrier to gene flow, probably during the Pleistocene. The results also revealed genetic heterogeneity in the eastern Mediterranean basin, and suggested that the population expanded from this sub-basin towards the Atlantic Ocean and Black Sea. © Inter-Research 2013.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Durand, J. D., Blel, H., Shen, K. N., Koutrakis, E. T., & Guinand, B. (2013). Population genetic structure of mugil cephalus in the mediterranean and black seas: A single mitochondrial clade and many nuclear barriers. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 474, 243–261. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps10080
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.