Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5154984 Biochemical Systematics and Ecology 2017 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
The Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas is a commercially important bivalve distributed along the northwest Pacific coast. Here C. gigas in Japan was investigated using mtDNA and microsatellite markers to elucidate its genetic structure and phylogeny. On the basis of mtDNA all populations showed high genetic diversity with limited genetic differentiation among populations. The pattern of MtDNA diversity suggested that C. gigas had experienced population expansion about 112 Kya, prior to the last glacial maximum (LGM), which accorded well with other marine organisms. For microsatellites, a Bayesian-based assignment test demonstrated that C. gigas is nearly panmictic. However, on the basis of estimates of FST, Kumano populations differed significantly from other populations, a recent occurrence based on low RST. Irrespective of geographical distance, genetic similarity was observed in the main aquaculture regions with large-scale transportation of cultured spat. Unlike in the Yellow Sea, a genetic bottleneck was not detected in Japanese populations. These results imply, contrary to the prevailing view, that C. gigas in Japan was demographically stable during the LGM. Gene flow by larval dispersal seems to be regionally restricted to localities of congenital areas by ocean currents, while genetic homogenization by cultivated oysters might have occurred in aquaculture areas.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Organic Chemistry
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