Turtle soup, Prohibition, and the population genetic structure of Diamondback Terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin)

Diamondback terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin) were a popular food item in early twentieth century America, and were consumed in soup with sherry. Intense market demand for terrapin meat resulted in population declines, notably along the Atlantic seaboard. Efforts to supply terrapins to markets resulte...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2017-08, Vol.12 (8), p.e0181898-e0181898
Hauptverfasser: Converse, Paul E, Kuchta, Shawn R, Hauswaldt, J Susanne, Roosenburg, Willem M
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description Diamondback terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin) were a popular food item in early twentieth century America, and were consumed in soup with sherry. Intense market demand for terrapin meat resulted in population declines, notably along the Atlantic seaboard. Efforts to supply terrapins to markets resulted in translocation events, as individuals were moved about to stock terrapin farms. However, in 1920 the market for turtle soup buckled with the enactment of the eighteenth amendment to the United States' Constitution-which initiated the prohibition of alcoholic drinks-and many terrapin fisheries dumped their stocks into local waters. We used microsatellite data to show that patterns of genetic diversity along the terrapin's coastal range are consistent with historical accounts of translocation and cultivation activities. We identified possible instances of human-mediated dispersal by estimating gene flow over historical and contemporary timescales, Bayesian model testing, and bottleneck tests. We recovered six genotypic clusters along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts with varying degrees of admixture, including increased contemporary gene flow from Texas to South Carolina, from North Carolina to Maryland, and from North Carolina to New York. In addition, Bayesian models incorporating translocation events outperformed stepping-stone models. Finally, we were unable to detect population bottlenecks, possibly due to translocation reintroducing genetic diversity into bottlenecked populations. Our data suggest that current patterns of genetic diversity in the terrapin were altered by the demand for turtle soup followed by the enactment of alcohol prohibition. In addition, our study shows that population genetic tools can elucidate metapopulation dynamics in taxa with complex genetic histories impacted by anthropogenic activities.
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subjects Alcoholic beverages
Animal Distribution
Animals
Anthropogenic factors
Bayes Theorem
Bayesian analysis
Biodiversity
Biology and Life Sciences
Clusters
Cultivation
Diamondback terrapin
Dispersal
Earth Sciences
Ecology
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Economic conditions
Emydidae
Fish
Fisheries
Food
Gene Flow
Genetic aspects
Genetic diversity
Genetic structure
Genetic Variation - genetics
Genetics, Population
Humans
Introduced Species
Malaclemys terrapin
Markets
Mathematical models
Meat
Metapopulations
Model testing
People and places
Population decline
Population genetics
Population studies
Prohibition
Taxa
Translocation
Trends
Turtles - genetics
United States
title Turtle soup, Prohibition, and the population genetic structure of Diamondback Terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin)
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