Data from: Regional population structure of the endangered Bridle Shiner (Notropis bifrenatus)
In the last 100 years, the Bridle Shiner has declined over significant parts of its range. We used mitochondrial and nuclear microsatellite markers to investigate population structure of this species. Tissue samples were collected from populations in six drainages in PA, NJ, NY and CT. One predomina...
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Zusammenfassung: | In the last 100 years, the Bridle Shiner has declined over significant
parts of its range. We used mitochondrial and nuclear microsatellite
markers to investigate population structure of this species. Tissue
samples were collected from populations in six drainages in PA, NJ, NY and
CT. One predominant haplotype was observed in the Delaware, Housatonic,
Passaic, and Raritan specimens. Specimens from the Hudson and St. Lawrence
drainages had a separate unique haplotype. Microsatellite loci revealed
low within-population genetic diversity and pairwise population
comparisons of allelic divergence showed significant genetic differences
among most drainages. Population structure analysis of microsatellite loci
recover the same population clusters inferred using mtDNA. Within the
Delaware drainage, there was significant differentiation among areas
separated by 128 km. Several alternate scenarios of population divergence
and population bottlenecks were investigated using approximate Bayesian
computing. These supported a scenario with a bottleneck occurring in the
ancestral population of Bridle Shiner followed by recent divergence of
Northern and Southern drainages. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.36035b9 |