1. Genetic patchiness in European eel adults evidenced by molecular genetics and population dynamics modelling.
- Author
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Pujolar JM, Bevacqua D, Andrello M, Capoccioni F, Ciccotti E, De Leo GA, and Zane L
- Subjects
- Anguilla physiology, Animals, Microsatellite Repeats, Population Dynamics, Reproduction genetics, Anguilla genetics, Genetic Variation, Genetics, Population, Models, Genetic
- Abstract
Disentangling the demographic processes that determine the genetic structure of a given species is a fundamental question in conservation and management. In the present study, the population structure of the European eel was examined with a multidisciplinary approach combining the fields of molecular genetics and population dynamics modelling. First, we analyzed a total of 346 adult specimens of known age collected in three separate sample sites using a large panel of 22 EST-linked microsatellite loci. Second, we developed a European eel-specific model to unravel the demographic mechanisms that can produce the level of genetic differentiation estimated by molecular markers. This is the first study that reveals a pattern of genetic patchiness in maturing adults of the European eel. A highly significant genetic differentiation was observed among samples that did not follow an Isolation-by-Distance or Isolation-by-Time pattern. The observation of genetic patchiness in adults is likely to result from a limited parental contribution to each spawning event as suggested by our modelling approach. The value of genetic differentiation found is predicted by the model when reproduction occurs in a limited number of spawning events isolated from each other in time or space, with an average of 130-375 breeders in each spawning event. Unpredictability in spawning success may have important consequences for the life-history evolution of the European eel, including a bet-hedging strategy (distributing reproductive efforts over time) which could in turn guarantee successful reproduction of some adults., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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