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Limited genetic variation and structure in softshell clams (Mya arenaria) across their native and introduced range
Authors
A Chao
A Chao
+62 more
AF Brown
AJ Berry
AJ Drummond
AJ Drummond
AR Rogers
C. A. Strasser
CA Hall Jr
CR Newell
D Hedgecock
D Posada
DA Caporale
DJ Brousseau
DJ Brousseau
DR Maddison
F Tajima
FS MacNeal
G Hewitt
G Watterson
GE May
GM Hewitt
H Hidu
JC Avise
JM Billerbeck
JP Wares
JP Wares
JPA Gardner
JPA Gardner
JR Waldman
K Yamahira
KL Heck Jr
KS Petersen
L Excoffier
LB Connell
LW Hutchins
M Slatkin
M Strasser
MM Hansen
MW Smith
N Ray
NJ Shackleton
O Folmer
P Baker
P. H. Barber
PB Marko
PH Barber
PS Walsh
R Lasota
RP Morgan
RS Waples
S Wright
SC Porter
SP Powers
SR Narum
TG Dahlgren
TL King
TM Cronin
TMC Present
VD Engle
W Upham
W Upham
Y Benjamini
YX Fu
Publication date
1 January 2008
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © Springer, 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Conservation Genetics 10 (2009): 803-814, doi:10.1007/s10592-008-9641-y.To offset declines in commercial landings of the softshell clam, Mya arenaria, resource managers are engaged in extensive stocking of seed clams throughout its range in the northwest Atlantic. Because a mixture of native and introduced stocks can disrupt locally adapted genotypes, we investigated genetic structure in M. arenaria populations across its current distribution to test for patterns of regional differentiation. We sequenced mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) for a total of 212 individuals from 12 sites in the northwest Atlantic (NW Atlantic), as well as two introduced sites, the northeast Pacific (NE Pacific) and the North Sea and Europe (NS Europe). Populations exhibited extremely low genetic variation, with one haplotype dominating (65-100%) at all sites sampled. Despite being introduced in the last 150-400 years, both NE Pacific and NS Europe populations had higher diversity measures than those in the NW Atlantic and both contained private haplotypes at frequencies of 10% to 27% consistent with their geographic isolation. While significant genetic structure (FST = 0.159, p<0.001) was observed between NW Atlantic and NS Europe, there was no evidence for genetic structure across the pronounced environmental clines of the NW Atlantic. Reduced genetic diversity in mtDNA combined with previous studies reporting reduced genetic diversity in nuclear markers strongly suggests a recent population expansion in the NW Atlantic, a pattern that may result from the retreat of ice sheets during Pleistocene glacial periods. Lack of genetic diversity and regional genetic differentiation suggests that present management strategies for the commercially important softshell clam are unlikely to have a significant impact on the regional distribution of genetic variation, although the possibility of disrupting locally adapted stocks cannot be excluded.This work was supported by NSF grants OCE-0326734 and OCE-0215905 to L. Mullineaux and OCE- 0349177 (Biological Oceanography) to PHB
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