4.4 Article

Contrasting population structures of freshwater atyid shrimps in Hong Kong and their conservation implications

期刊

MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH
卷 72, 期 11, 页码 1667-1678

出版社

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/MF21069

关键词

Caridea; conservation genetics; Decapoda; phylogeography

资金

  1. Environment and Conservation Fund, Hong Kong SAR Government [74/2015]
  2. General Research Fund from the Research Grants Council, Hong Kong SAR, China [14112920]
  3. Direct Grant for Research, Research Committee, The Chinese University of Hong Kong [4053487]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The fine-scale population structure of five atyid species in highly urbanized Hong Kong has been studied, revealing contrasting phylogeographic patterns and population differentiation at a scale of <1 km. This population structuring is attributed to limited dispersal ability, inbreeding, and demographic fluctuations associated with climate changes since the Pleistocene, shedding new light on the evolution of the widely distributed shrimp genus and aiding in effective conservation planning.
Understanding population connectivity is crucial for effective conservation management. Schemes for speculating potential connectivity patterns over large to medium geographic scales using riverscape and life history features have been developed, but whether they are still applicable over fine scales has rarely been examined. Caridina shrimps (Family Atyidae) constitute a major component of freshwater ecosystems. Nonetheless, although over 20% of atyid species are considered Threatened or Near Threatened on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List, a general lack of understanding of the population structure of these species, which typically have restricted distributions, significantly hampers conservation management. Here, we examined the fine-scale population structure of five atyid species in Hong Kong, a highly urbanised metropolis, using the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) gene and four to six microsatellite markers. The results reveal species-specific contrasting phylogeographic patterns, ranging from wide-range genetic panmixia to population differentiation at an extremely small scale of <1 km. This pronounced population structuring may be attributed to the freshwater obligates' limited dispersal ability, high level of inbreeding and marked demographic fluctuations associated with climate changes since the Pleistocene. The results shed new light on the evolution of this widely distributed shrimp genus and bridge the critical knowledge gap in formulating effective conservation plans.

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