Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10223900 Marine Environmental Research 2018 38 Pages PDF
Abstract
Using genome-wide SNP data obtained from high-throughput techniques based on double digest restriction site-associated DNA sequencing (ddRAD-seq), we elucidated the migration history and genetic diversity of the Japanese population of the ecologically important brown seaweed Sargassum thunbergii (Mertens ex Roth) Kuntze. STRUCTURE and NeighborNet analyses showed a clear genetic differentiation among populations of four geographic regions: Kyushu (POP1); Sea of Japan (POP2); Hokkaido and Tohoku (POP3); and Pacific coast from Kyushu to Kanto (POP4). Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC) analysis indicated that POP4 diverged first, followed by the separation between POP2 (the largest effective population size) and POP3; POP1 was the last to form, shaped by the mixture of POP2 (73%) and POP4 (27%). High genetic diversity was detected in POP1 and POP2, whereas low genetic diversity was detected in POP3 and POP4. These results indicated that S. thunbergii populations of Kyushu and the Sea of Japan might have been maintained as large and stable populations gathered different lineages from China, Korea and/or Japan.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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