1. Reproductive isolation with little genetic divergence in sympatric populations of brown trout (Salmo trutta).
- Author
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Ryman N, Allendorf FW, and Ståhl G
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Evolution, Ecology, Enzymes genetics, Alleles, Gene Frequency, Salmonidae genetics, Trout genetics
- Abstract
Two reproductively isolated demes of brown trout coexist in a small Swedish mountain lake, Lake Bunnersjörna. We electrophoretically examined 102 specimens from that lake for 27 enzymes encoded by 54 loci. The two demes are fixed for different alleles at a lactate dehydrogenase locus (LDH-1); statistically significant allele frequency differences at five other loci further support the complete lack of gene flow between these demes. There are significant differences in growth rates between fish in the two demes, but no further morphological differentiation h-s been detected.--In light of these findings, the genetic distance between these populations is surprisingly small (Nei's I = 0.975). These demes represent one of the least genetically divergent, reproductively isolated sympatric pair of vertebrate populations that have been identified. The results are discussed from both an evolutionary and ecological perspective.
- Published
- 1979
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