4.7 Article

Fragmentation of sea bass populations in the western and eastern Mediterranean as revealed by microsatellite polymorphism

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 267, Issue 1446, Pages 929-935

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2000.1092

Keywords

Dicentrarchus labrax; microsatellites; population fragmentation; genetic structure; Mediterranean Sea

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We studied the genetic structure at six microsatellite loci of the Mediterranean sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) on 19 samples collected from different localities in the western and eastern Mediterranean basins. Significant divergence was found between the two basins. The distance tree showed two separate clusters of populations which matched well with geography, with the noticeable exception of one Egyptian sample which grouped within the western clade, a fact attributable to the introduction of aquaculture broodstock. No heterogeneity was observed within the western basin (<(theta)over cap> = 0.0014 and n.s.). However, a significant level of differentiation was found among samples of the eastern Mediterranean (<(theta)over cap> = 0.026 and p < 0.001). These results match with water currents but probably not with the dispersal abilities of this fish species. We thus hypothesize that selective forces are at play which limit long-range dispersal, a fact to be taken into account in the debate about speciation processes in the marine environment.

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