Highly regional population structure of Spondyliosoma cantharus depicted by nuclear and mitochondrial DNA data

Resolution of population structure represents an effective way to define biological stocks and inform efficient fisheries management. In the present study, the phylogeography of the protogynous sparid Spondyliosoma cantharus , in the East Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea, was investigated with nuclear...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2020-03, Vol.10 (1), p.4063-4063, Article 4063
Hauptverfasser: Neves, Ana, Vieira, Ana Rita, Sequeira, Vera, Paiva, Rafaela Barros, Gordo, Leonel Serrano, Paulo, Octávio S.
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Vieira, Ana Rita
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Paiva, Rafaela Barros
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Paulo, Octávio S.
description Resolution of population structure represents an effective way to define biological stocks and inform efficient fisheries management. In the present study, the phylogeography of the protogynous sparid Spondyliosoma cantharus , in the East Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea, was investigated with nuclear (S7) and mitochondrial (cytochrome b ) DNA markers. Significant divergence of four regional genetic groups was observed: North Eastern Atlantic, Mediterranean Sea, Western African Transition (Cape Verde) and Gulf of Guinea (Angola). The two southern populations (Cape Verde and Angola) each comprised reciprocally monophyletic mtDNA lineages, revealed low levels of diversity in Cape Verde and high diversity for Angola despite being represented by only 14 individuals. A complete divergence between North Atlantic and Mediterranean populations was depicted by the mitochondrial marker, but a highly shared nuclear haplotype revealed an incomplete lineage sorting between these regions. Bayesian skyline plots and associated statistics revealed different dynamics among the four regions. Cape Verde showed no expansion and the expansion time estimated for Angola was much older than for the other regions. Mediterranean region seems to have experienced an early population growth but has remained with a stable population size for the last 30000 years while the North Atlantic population has been steadily growing. The lack of genetic structuring within these regions should not be taken as evidence of demographic panmixia in light of potential resolution thresholds and previous evidence of intra-regional phenotypic heterogeneity.
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subjects 45/23
45/77
631/158/1745
631/158/857
Animals
Bayesian analysis
Cytochrome b
Databases, Nucleic Acid
Deoxyribonucleic acid
DNA
DNA, Mitochondrial - genetics
Fisheries management
Fishery management
Haplotypes
Heterogeneity
Humanities and Social Sciences
Mitochondrial DNA
multidisciplinary
Phylogeography
Population
Population growth
Population number
Population structure
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Sea Bream - classification
Sea Bream - genetics
Spondyliosoma cantharus
title Highly regional population structure of Spondyliosoma cantharus depicted by nuclear and mitochondrial DNA data
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