72 results on '"Hellemans, B."'
Search Results
2. Gene transcription reflects poor health status of resident European eel chronically exposed to environmental pollutants
- Author
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Maes, G.E., Raeymaekers, J.A.M., Hellemans, B., Geeraerts, C., Parmentier, K., De Temmerman, L., Volckaert, F.A.M., and Belpaire, C.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Comparative visual and DNA-based diet assessment extends the prey spectrum of polar cod Boreogadus saida
- Author
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Maes, Sarah, Schaafsma, Fokje, Christiansen, Henrik, Hellemans, B, Lucassen, Magnus, Mark, Felix Christopher, Flores, Hauke, Volckaert, FAM, Maes, Sarah, Schaafsma, Fokje, Christiansen, Henrik, Hellemans, B, Lucassen, Magnus, Mark, Felix Christopher, Flores, Hauke, and Volckaert, FAM
- Abstract
The Arctic marine ecosystem is changing fast due to climate change, emphasizing the need for solid ecological baselines and monitoring. The polar cod Boreogadus saida functions as key species in the Arctic marine food web. We investigated the stomach content of polar cod from the northern Barents Sea using DNA metabarcoding with the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) gene in parallel with classical visual analysis. Arctic amphipods and krill dominated the diet in both methods. Yet, metabarcoding allowed for the identification of digested and unidentifiable prey and provided higher taxonomic resolution, revealing new and undiscovered prey items of polar cod in the area. Furthermore, molecular results suggest a higher importance of barnacles and fish (supposedly eggs and pelagic larvae) in the diet than previously recorded. Parasites and, in 6 cases other prey items, were only visually identified, demonstrating the complementary nature of both approaches. The presence of temperate and boreal prey species such as Northern krill and (early life stages of) European flounder and European plaice illustrate the advection of boreal taxa into the polar region or may be indicative of ongoing borealization in the Barents Sea. We show that a combination of visual analysis and metabarcoding provides complementary and semi-quantitative dietary information, and integrative insights to monitor changing marine food webs.
- Published
- 2022
4. Comparative visual and DNA-based diet assessment extends the prey spectrum of polar cod Boreogadus saida
- Author
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Maes, Sarah M., Schaafsma, F.L., Christiansen, H., Hellemans, B., Lucassen, M., Mark, F.C., Flores, H., Volckaert, F.A.M., Maes, Sarah M., Schaafsma, F.L., Christiansen, H., Hellemans, B., Lucassen, M., Mark, F.C., Flores, H., and Volckaert, F.A.M.
- Abstract
The Arctic marine ecosystem is changing fast due to climate change, emphasizing the need for solid ecological baselines and monitoring. The polar cod Boreogadus saida functions as a key species in the Arctic marine food web. We investigated the stomach contents of polar cod from the northern Barents Sea using DNA metabarcoding with the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase I gene in parallel with classical visual analysis. Arctic amphipods and krill dominated the diet in both methods. Yet, metabarcoding allowed for the identification of digested and unidentifiable prey and provided higher taxonomic resolution, revealing new and undiscovered prey items of polar cod in the area. Furthermore, molecular results suggest a higher importance of barnacles and fish (presumably eggs and pelagic larvae) in the diet than previously recorded. Parasites and, in 6 cases, other prey items were only visually identified, demonstrating the complementary nature of both approaches. The presence of temperate and boreal prey species such as northern krill and (early life stages of) European flounder and European plaice illustrates the advection of boreal taxa into the polar region or may be indicative of ongoing borealisation in the Barents Sea. We show that a combination of visual analysis and metabarcoding provides complementary and semi-quantitative dietary information and integrative insights to monitor changing marine food webs
- Published
- 2022
5. Mining for Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in Expressed Sequence Tags of European Sea Bass
- Author
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Souche E. L., Hellemans B., Van Houdt J. K. J., Canario A., Klages S., Reinhardt R., and Volckaert F. A. M.
- Subjects
Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 - Abstract
As a multitude of sequence data are published, discovering polymorphisms bioinformatically becomes a valid option. In silico Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) detection is based on the analysis of multiple alignments. Each column of an alignment is considered a slice containing one base of every sequence aligned. If a mismatch is detected, the slice is further analysed and the mismatch may be reported as a candidate SNP.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Population structure and connectivity in the genus Molva in the Northeast Atlantic.
- Author
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McGill, L, McDevitt, A D, Hellemans, B, Neat, F, Knutsen, H, Mariani, S, Christiansen, H, Johansen, T, Volckaert, F A M, and Coscia, I
- Subjects
COLD adaptation ,GENETIC markers ,COLD (Temperature) ,BODY temperature regulation ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) - Abstract
In fisheries, operational management units and biological data often do not coincide. In many cases, this is not even known due to the lack of information about a species' population structure or behaviour. This study focuses on two such species, the common ling Molva molva and the blue ling M. dypterygia , two Northeast Atlantic gadoids with overlapping geographical distribution, but different depth habitats. Heavily exploited throughout their ranges, with declining catches, little is known about their population structure. Genotyping-by-sequencing at thousands of genetic markers indicated that both species are separated into two major groups, one represented by samples from the coasts of western Scotland, Greenland, and the Bay of Biscay and the other off the coast of Norway. This signal is stronger for the deeper dwelling blue ling, even though adult dispersal was also identified for this species. Despite small sample sizes, fine-scale patterns of genetic structure were identified along Norway for common ling. Signatures of adaptation in blue ling consisted in signs of selections in genes involved in vision, growth, and adaptation to cold temperatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Evidence for fine-scale genetic structure and estuarine colonization in a potential high gene flow marine goby (Pomatoschistus minutus)
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Pampoulie, C., Gysels, E.S., Maes, G.E., Hellemans, B., Volckaert, F.A.M., Leentjes, V., and Jones, A. G.
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Marine fishes -- Genetic aspects ,Marine fishes -- Research ,Isoenzymes -- Research ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Genetics diversity and differentiation was assessed in 15 samples of the sand goby Pomatoschistus minutus from four major habitats of the North Sea. The results showed indications of a complex and dynamic spatiotemporal structure that was determined by historical events and local oceanic currents.
- Published
- 2004
8. Ancient Marine Metabarcoding - A new approach of stomach and microbiome analysis for historical fish
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Heindler, F.M., Hellemans, B., Christiansen, H., Frédérich, B., Dettaï, A., Maes, G.E., Van de Putte, A., and Volckaert, F.A.M.
- Published
- 2018
9. Betekenisverschuivingen in de kunst- en cultuurgeschiedenis. Guillaume Tell tussen creatie en receptie
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Berkel, K. van, Aerts, R.A.M., Hellemans, B., Furnée, W.J.H., Berkel, K. van, Aerts, R.A.M., Hellemans, B., and Furnée, W.J.H.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext
- Published
- 2018
10. Performance and precision of double digestion RAD (ddRAD) genotyping in large multiplexed datasets of marine fish species
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Maroso, F., Hillen, J E J, Pardo, B. G., Gkagkavouzis, K., Coscia, I., Hermida, M., Franch, R., Hellemans, B., Van Houdt, J., Simionati, B., Taggart, J. B., Nielsen, Einar Eg, Maes, G., Ciavaglia, S. A., Webster, L. M. I., Volckaert, F. A. M., Martinez, P., Bargelloni, L., Ogden, R., AquaTrace, Consortium, Maroso, F., Hillen, J E J, Pardo, B. G., Gkagkavouzis, K., Coscia, I., Hermida, M., Franch, R., Hellemans, B., Van Houdt, J., Simionati, B., Taggart, J. B., Nielsen, Einar Eg, Maes, G., Ciavaglia, S. A., Webster, L. M. I., Volckaert, F. A. M., Martinez, P., Bargelloni, L., Ogden, R., and AquaTrace, Consortium
- Abstract
The development of Genotyping-By-Sequencing (GBS) technologies enables cost-effective analysis of large numbers of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs), especially in "non-model" species. Nevertheless, as such technologies enter a mature phase, biases and errors inherent to GBS are becoming evident. Here, we evaluated the performance of double digest Restriction enzyme Associated DNA (ddRAD) sequencing in SNP genotyping studies including high number of samples. Datasets of sequence data were generated from three marine teleost species (>5500 samples, >2.5 × 1012 bases in total), using a standardized protocol. A common bioinformatics pipeline based on STACKS was established, with and without the use of a reference genome. We performed analyses throughout the production and analysis of ddRAD data in order to explore (i) the loss of information due to heterogeneous raw read number across samples; (ii) the discrepancy between expected and observed tag length and coverage; (iii) the performances of reference based vs. de novo approaches; (iv) the sources of potential genotyping errors of the library preparation/bioinformatics protocol, by comparing technical replicates. Our results showed use of a reference genome and a posteriori genotype correction improved genotyping precision. Individual read coverage was a key variable for reproducibility; variance in sequencing depth between loci in the same individual was also identified as an important factor and found to correlate to tag length. A comparison of downstream analysis carried out with ddRAD vs single SNP allele specific assay genotypes provided information about the levels of genotyping imprecision that can have a significant impact on allele frequency estimations and population assignment. The results and insights presented here will help to select and improve approaches to the analysis of large datasets based on RAD-like methodologies.
- Published
- 2018
11. Adaptive and non-adaptive divergence in a common landscape
- Author
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Raeymaekers, J.A.M., Chaturvedi, A., Hablützel, P.I., Verdonck, I., Hellemans, B., Maes, G.E., De Meester, L., and Volckaert, F.A.M.
- Abstract
Species in a common landscape often face similar selective environments. The capacity of organisms to adapt to these environments may be largely species specific. Quantifying shared and unique adaptive responses across species within landscapes may thus improve our understanding of landscape-moderated biodiversity patterns. Here we test to what extent populations of two coexisting and phylogenetically related fishes—three-spined and nine-spined stickleback—differ in the strength and nature of neutral and adaptive divergence along a salinity gradient. Phenotypic differentiation, neutral genetic differentiation and genomic signatures of adaptation are stronger in the three-spined stickleback. Yet, both species show substantial phenotypic parallelism. In contrast, genomic signatures of adaptation involve different genomic regions, and are thus non-parallel. The relative contribution of spatial and environmental drivers of population divergence in each species reflects different strategies for persistence in the same landscape. These results provide insight in the mechanisms underlying variation in evolutionary versatility and ecological success among species within landscapes.
- Published
- 2017
12. Historical DNA Barcoding of trematomid fishes using museum samples
- Author
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Heindler, F.M., Hellemans, B., Christiansen, H., Van de Putte, A., Maes, G.E., and Volckaert, F.A.M.
- Published
- 2017
13. Estimates of genetic variability and inbreeding in selected populations of European sea bass
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Carr, A., Hellemans, B., Ogden, R., Taggart, John B., Vandeputte, Marc, Vergnet, Alain, Volcklaert, Filip A.M., Coscia, I., and Hillen, Jasmien
- Subjects
inbreeding ,selection ,SNP ,genetic - Published
- 2017
14. Mito-nuclear discordance in the degree of population differentiation in a marine goby
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Larmuseau, M.H.D., Rayemaekers, J.A.M., Hellemans, B., van Houdt, J.K.J., and Volckaert, F.A.M.
- Subjects
Microsatellites (Genetics) -- Usage ,Cladistic analysis -- Usage ,Fish populations -- Thinning ,Fish populations -- Research ,Company distribution practices ,Biological sciences - Published
- 2010
15. Estimates of genetic variability and inbreeding in experimentally selected populations of European sea bass
- Author
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Hillen, J. E. J., Coscia, I., Vandeputte, Marc, Herten, K., Hellemans, B., Maroso, F., Vergnet, Alain, Allal, Francois, Maes, G. E., Volckaert, F. A. M., Hillen, J. E. J., Coscia, I., Vandeputte, Marc, Herten, K., Hellemans, B., Maroso, F., Vergnet, Alain, Allal, Francois, Maes, G. E., and Volckaert, F. A. M.
- Abstract
The aquaculture industry has increasingly aimed at improving economically important traits like growth, feed efficiency and resistance to infections. Artificial selection represents an important window of opportunity to significantly improve production. However, the pitfall is that selection will reduce genetic diversity and increase inbreeding in the farmed stocks. Genetic tools are very useful in this context as they provide accurate measures of genetic diversity together with many additional insights in the stock status and the selection process. In this study we assessed the level of genetic variability and relatedness over several generations of two lines of experimentally selected European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax L.). The first line was selected for growth over three generations and the second line for both high and low weight loss under a starvation regime over two generations. We used a genomic approach (2549 single nucleotide polymorphism markers derived from double digest restriction site associated DNA sequencing) in combination with eight microsatellites to estimate genetic variation, relatedness, effective population size and genetic differentiation across generations. Individual heterozygosity estimates indicated that the selected lines showed no significant reduction in diversity compared with wild populations. There was, however, a decreasing trend in allelic richness, suggesting the loss of low frequency alleles. We compared the estimates of effective population size from genetic markers with pedigree information and found good correspondence between methods. This study provides important insights in the genetic consequences of selective breeding and demonstrates the operational use of the latest genomic tools to estimate variability, inbreeding and at a later stage domestication and artificial selection.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Permanent genetic resources added to Molecular Ecology Resources Database 1 December 2011-31 January 2012
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Arias, M.C., Arnoux, E., Bell, J.J., Bernadou, A., Bino, G., Blatrix, R., Bourguet, Denis, Carrea, C., Clamens, A.L., Cunha, H.A., d'Alencon, E., Ding, Y., Djieto-Lordon, C., Dubois, M.P., Dumas, P., Eraud, C., Faivre, B., Francisco, F.O., Francoso, E., Garcia, Marta, Gardner, J.P.A., Garnier, S., Gimenez, S., Gold, J.R., Harris, D.J., He, G.C., Hellemans, B., Hollenbeck, C.M., Jing, S.L., Kergoat, G.J., Liu, B.F., McDowell, J.R., McKey, D., Miller, T.L., Newton, E., Lohan, K.M.P., Papetti, C., Paterson, I., Peccoud, J., Peng, X.X., Piatscheck, F., Ponsard, S., Reece, K.S., Reisser, C.M.O., Renshaw, M.A., Ruzzante, D.E., Sauve, M., Shields, J.D., Sole-Cava, A., Souche, E. L., Van Houdt, J.K.J., Vasconcellos, A., Volckaert, F.A.M., Wang, S.Z., Xiao, J., Yu, H. J., Zane, L., Zannato, B., Zemlak, T.S., Zhang, C.X., Zhao, Y., Zhou, X., and Zhu, L.L.
- Abstract
This article documents the addition of 473 microsatellite marker loci and 71 pairs of single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) sequencing primers to the Molecular Ecology Resources Database. Loci were developed for the following species: Barteria fistulosa, Bombus morio, Galaxias platei, Hematodinium perezi, Macrocentrus cingulum Brischke (a.k.a. M.abdominalis Fab., M.grandii Goidanich or M.gifuensis Ashmead), Micropogonias furnieri, Nerita melanotragus, Nilaparvata lugens Stal, Sciaenops ocellatus, Scomber scombrus, Spodoptera frugiperda and Turdus lherminieri. These loci were cross-tested on the following species: Barteria dewevrei, Barteria nigritana, Barteria solida, Cynoscion acoupa, Cynoscion jamaicensis, Cynoscion leiarchus, Cynoscion nebulosus, Cynoscion striatus, Cynoscion virescens, Macrodon ancylodon, Menticirrhus americanus, Nilaparvata muiri and Umbrina canosai. This article also documents the addition of 116 sequencing primer pairs for Dicentrarchus labrax.
- Published
- 2012
17. Understanding benthic, pelagic and airborne ecosystem interactions in shallow coastal seas. 'Westbanks': Final Report
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Vanaverbeke, J., Braarup, A.B., Braeckman, U., Courtens, W., Cuveliers, E., Deneudt, K., Goffin, A., Hellemans, B., Huyse, T., Lacroix, G., Larmuseau, M., Mees, J., Provoost, P., Rabaut, M., Remerie, T., Savina, M., Soetaert, K., Stienen, E.W.M., Verstraete, H., Volckaert, F., and Vincx, M.
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Benthos ,Biodiversity ,Dispersion ,Ecosystems - Published
- 2011
18. The molecular basis of phenotypic adaptive changes in the common sole (Solea solea L.): disentangling fisheries from climate induced evolution
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Maes, G.E., Diopere, E., Cuveliers, E., Mollet, F.M., Hellemans, B., Rijnsdorp, A.D., and Volckaert, F.A.M.
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Solea solea [Sole] ,Fisheries ,Overfishing ,Climatic changes ,Management - Published
- 2010
19. Distributional and demographic consequences of Pleistocene glaciations for a marine demersal fish
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Larmuseau, M., Van Houdt, J.K.J., Hellemans, B., Guelinckx, J., and Volckaert, F.A.M.
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- 2008
20. Genetic variation at SNP loci across wild populations of the European sea bass
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Souche, E., Hellemans, B., Bargelloni, L., Guinand, B., Bonhomme, F., and Volckaert, F.
- Published
- 2008
21. Exploring glacial and present evolutionary patterns of a marine goby, Pomatoschistus minutus
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Larmuseau, M.H.D., Van Houdt, J.K.J., Guelinckx, J., Hellemans, B., and Volckaert, F.A.M.J.
- Subjects
Pleistocene ,Holocene ,Evolution ,Pomatoschistus minutus (Pallas, 1770) [Sand goby] - Abstract
A classical understanding of marine fishes is that they have high effective population sizes and high levels of dispersal due to an apparent lack of barriers in the marine environment. The realization of a genetic population structure is therefore thought to be a slow process. To gain insights in this process, it is a challenge to disentangle the interaction between selection, gene flow, population history and genetic drift. The sand goby (Pomatoschistus minutus), which is an important ecological but noncommercial species, was chosen to distinguish between natural and anthropologically induced processes. A spatio-temporal analysis with samples from different localities throughout the species distribution and with two types of genetic markers was performed to assess the neutral genetic population structure. Phylogeographical patterns were studied by sequence cytochrome b (mtDNA). Nine new nuclear microsatellites were developed and used to describe the current genetic diversity and population structure. The genetic structure of the sand goby is best explained by a combination of present and historic factors. Due to its high potential for dispersion and high effective population size, it shows the typical features of a marine fish with a high level of diversity and a limited degree of genetic differentiation. The large genetic distance between the Venetian and all other samples shows that the sand gobies from the Adriatic Sea should be considered as a distinct cryptic species of the genus Pomatoschistus. Low but significant differentiation is observed between Atlantic and western Mediterranean P. minutus. In the Atlantic and Baltic basins, there is evidence for a postglacial range expansion and a weak pattern of isolation-by-distance. Furthermore the results support the hypothesis of a glacial refugium and a fine-scale genetic structure in the southern North Sea. The neutral genetic pattern will be compared with putatively adaptive loci in order to study the genomic characteristics of local adaptation in the marine environment. This should provide a better understanding of how fish respond to changes in the environment.
- Published
- 2007
22. In silico detection of single nucleotide polymorphisms in expressed sequence tags of European sea bass
- Author
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Souche, E., Hellemans, B., Canario, A., Klages, S., Reinhardt, R., and Volckaert, F.A.M.J.
- Subjects
Biopolymorphism ,Nucleotides ,Dicentrarchus labrax [Bass] ,food and beverages - Abstract
As a multitude of sequence data are published, discovering polymorphisms bioinformatically becomes a valid option. In silico Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) detection is based on the analysis of multiple alignments. Each column of an alignment is considered a slice containing one base of every sequence aligned. If a mismatch is detected, the slice is further analysed and the mismatch may be reported as a candidate SNP. Around 30,000 European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) Expressed Sequence Tags (ESTs) have been sequenced and processed at the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics. Since 55.1% (16,117) ESTs are redundant, they provide a resource for in silico SNP discovery. To prevent the detection of sequencing errors, a redundancy of 2 is required for a mismatch to be considered a candidate SNP (Picoult- Newberg et al., 1999). Thus, only contigs containing more than 4 overlapping sequences are analysed. 974 (21.3%) contigs qualify for in silico SNPs discovery, representing 5,548 (19%) ESTs and 478,232 base pairs. Various tools are used to detect candidate SNPs; so far, 2 software packages have been tried. 246 candidate SNPs, of which 56 indels, were proposed by SNPServer using default parameters (Savage et al., 2005). Less stringent parameters lead to the discovery of 1027 candidate SNPs, of which 267 indels. PolyBayes (Marth et al., 1999) selected 772 candidates SNPs, of which 231 indels. The Primer3 software is used to design primers flanking each candidate SNP, which are validated in the laboratory by sequencing. Polymorphisms will be mapped, used for selection in aquaculture and the study of adaptation in natural populations.
- Published
- 2007
23. Higher trophic levels in the southern North Sea 'TROPHOS':Final report EV/25
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Vanaverbeke, J., Franco, M.A., Remerie, T., Vanreusel, A., Vincx, M., Moodley, L., Soetaert, K., van Oevelen, D., Courtens, W., Stienen, E., Van de walle, M., Deneudt, K., Vanden Berghe, E., Draisma, S., Hellemans, B., Huyse, T., Volckaert, F.A.M.J., and Van den Eynde, D.
- Subjects
Coast and estuaries ,ANE, North Sea, Southern Bight ,B280-animal-ecology ,Trophic levels - Abstract
TROPHOS is a co-operation between five Belgian institutes (RUG-Marine Biology, KULeuven-Aquatic Ecology, Institute of Nature Conservation, MUMM and VLIZ) and one Dutch institute (NIOO-CEMO) and aims at a better understanding of processes structuring the higher trophic levels in the North Sea. As we will not ignore the link between ecosystem functioning and aquatic biodiversity, our results will also serve in aspects of sustainable management for those areas on the Belgian Continental Shelf (BCS) of the North Sea, which fulfil the criteria for protection status in marine reserves.
- Published
- 2007
24. Mining for single nucleotide polymorphisms in expressed sequence tags of sea bass
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Souche, E., Hellemans, B., Klages, S., Reinhart, R., and Volckaert, F.A.M.J.
- Published
- 2006
25. The genomics of local adaptation of a marine demersal fish
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Larmuseau, M.H.D., Van Houdt, J.K.J., Maes, G.E., Hellemans, B., and Volckaert, F.A.M.J.
- Subjects
Adaptations ,Environmental factors ,Genetics ,Population number ,Pomatoschistus minutus (Pallas, 1770) [Sand goby] ,Population structure ,Marine environment ,Marine fish - Published
- 2006
26. Structural and functional biodiversity of North Sea ecosystems: species and their habitats as indicators for a sustainable development of the Belgian Continental Shelf
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Vincx, M., Bonne, W., Cattrijsse, A., Degraer, S., Dewicke, A., Steyaert, M., Vanaverbeke, J., Van Hoey, G., Stienen, E., Van Waeyenberge, J., Kuijken, E., Meire, P., Offringa, H., Seys, J., Volckaert, F.A.M.J., Gysels, E.S., Hellemans, B., Huyse, T., and Pampoulie, C.
- Abstract
The Belgian Continental Shelf (BCS) is characterized by numerous subtidal sandbanks. Their close position to the coastline and the shallowness of the area make them unique, both from an ecological and geological point of view. It has recently been shown that the sandbank system in the Belgian coastal area acts as an intemationally important resting and foraging area for various seabird species. The project 'Structural and functional biodiversity of North Sea ecosystems: species and their habitats as indicators for a sustainable development of the Belgian continental shelf aims to assess the factors that determine and influence the marine biodiversity of the Belgian Continental Shelf. Within this project, an emphasis is made to incorporate all existing and new biodiversity information (community, population and genetic level) on all benthic compartments, including demersal fish, their parasites and birds. Most emphasis is given on the description of the structural aspects of benthic biodiversity in order to find a pattern within the relationship between the biological and the geochemical characteristics of the sediment. The question whether the structuring of ecosystem and species diversity and its functioning is reflected in the genetic structuring of marine taxa on the Belgian Continental Shelf is addressed for the first time.
- Published
- 2004
27. Structural and functional biodiversity of north sea ecosystems:Species and their habitats as indicators for a sustainable development of the belgian continental shelf
- Author
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Vincx, M, Bonne, W, Cattrijsse, A, Degraer, S, Dewicke, A, Steyaert, M, Vanaverbeke, J, Van hoey, G, Stienen, Eric, Van Waeyenberghe, J, Kuijken, Eckhart, Meire, Patrick, Offringa, H, Seys, J, Volckaert, F. A. M, Gysels, E, Hellemans, B, Huyse, T, and Pampoulie, C
- Subjects
Sea and coastal birds ,Coast and estuaries ,B280-animal-ecology - Published
- 2002
28. Ontwikkeling van een gedocumenteerde gegevensbank over uitheemse vissoorten in Vlaanderen met bijkomend onderzoek naar blauwbandgrondel:eindverslag : 1.12.2000 - 30.11.2001: AMINAL/NATUUR/VLINA00/11
- Author
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Louette, Gerald, Anseeuw, D, Gaethofs, T, Hellemans, B, Volckaert, F. A. M, Verreycken, Hugo, Van Thuyne, Gerlinde, De Charleroy, Daniel, Belpaire, Claude, Declerck, S, Teugels, G, De Meester, L, and Ollevier, F
- Subjects
Vissen ,B280-dierenecologie ,Exoten (beheer) - Published
- 2002
29. Timing of the population dynamics of bullhead Cottus gobio (Teleostei : Cottidae) during the Pleistocene
- Author
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Volckaert, F.A.M.J., Hänfling, B., Hellemans, B., and Carvalho, G.R.
- Abstract
Pleistocene genetic structure of the bullhead, Cottus gobio, was evaluated across the western Palearctic using a 771-bp long fragment of the mitochondrial control region in 123 individuals collected at 35 sites (data set I). In total, 59 haplotypes that differed at 73 positions (9.3%) were detected. Data analysis also included sequences from Englbrecht et al. (2000), thus increasing the sampling to a more comprehensive data set of 529 fish and 63 control region sequences of 482 bp (data set II). A minimum spanning and phylogenetic tree identified a seventh clade (Brittany-Loire) in addition to the previously identified six clades. The geographical range of the North Sea and Lower Rhine clades was considerably larger than thought previously. Haplotype diversity was generally low, and the total fixation index high (F-ST = 0.49). Among-group differentiation accounted for 41.7% (data set I) of the variation. Contiguous range expansions and restricted gene flow combined with isolation by distance, interspersed with past fragmentation characterize bullhead across its range. New is the knowledge that dated interglacial periods correlated with population expansions; river captures, proglacial lake systems and sea level played a significant role in the dispersal and expansion either in northern or southern direction. Hence it became possible to identify and date the colonization routes and putative palaeorefugia, most of which were located in Central and North-west Europe. Glacial periods resulted in distinct fragmentation events and lineage sorting.
- Published
- 2002
30. Structural and functional biodiversity of North Sea ecosystems: species and their habitats as indicators for a sustainable development of the Belgian Continental Shelf = De structurele en functionele biodiversiteit van de Noordzee-ecosystemen
- Author
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Vincx, M., Bonne, W., Cattrijsse, A., Degraer, S., Dewicke, A., Steyaert, M., Vanaverbeke, J., Van Hoey, G., Stienen, E., Van Waeyenberge, J., Kuijken, E., Meire, P., Offringa, H., Seys, J., Volckaert, F.A.M.J., Gysels, E.S., Huyse, T., Zietara, M.S., Geets, A., and Hellemans, B.
- Subjects
ANE, North Sea ,ANE, Belgium, Belgian Continental Shelf (BCS) - Published
- 2002
31. High genetic diversity and connectivity in a common mesopelagic fish of the Southern Ocean
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Van de Putte, A.P., Van Houdt, J.K.J., Maes, G.E., Hellemans, B., Collins, Martin Anthony, Volckaert, F.A.M., Van de Putte, A.P., Van Houdt, J.K.J., Maes, G.E., Hellemans, B., Collins, Martin Anthony, and Volckaert, F.A.M.
- Abstract
Many marine pelagic fish species are characterized by subtle but complex genetic structures and dynamics, depending on the balance between current-mediated larval dispersal and adult active homing behavior. The circumantarctic continuous hydrodynamics of the Southern Ocean is a prime example of a system with a potentially great homogenizing effect among distant populations. We tested this hypothesis by analyzing the contemporary genetic relatedness among populations of a common and endemic mesopelagic fish of the Southern Ocean, Electrona antarctica. Seven newly developed species-specific microsatellite markers were used to investigate patterns of neutral genetic variation in 11 geographically widespread samples (n=400) collected between 2006 and 2007. We detected a very high level of genetic diversity, but a striking lack of genetic differentiation on a circumantarctic scale, indicating large effective population sizes complemented with high levels of admixture. These findings underscore the large scale homogenizing effect of the Southern Coastal Current, leading to a high level of connectivity of our model species in the Southern Ocean, which is congruent with its huge biomass and central role in marine food webs. As an important Antarctic marine living resource this species may as such be managed on a circumantarctic level, although the demographic stability of this stock should be estimated urgently.
- Published
- 2012
32. Heritability of cortisol response to confinement stress in European sea bass dicentrarchus labrax
- Author
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Volckaert, F.A.M., Hellemans, B., Batargias, C., Louro, B., Massault, C., Van Houdt, J.K.J., Haley, C., de Koning, D.J., Canario, A.V.M., Volckaert, F.A.M., Hellemans, B., Batargias, C., Louro, B., Massault, C., Van Houdt, J.K.J., Haley, C., de Koning, D.J., and Canario, A.V.M.
- Abstract
Background: In fish, the most studied production traits in terms of heritability are body weight or growth, stress or disease resistance, while heritability of cortisol levels, widely used as a measure of response to stress, is less studied. In this study, we have estimated heritabilities of two growth traits (body weight and length) and of cortisol response to confinement stress in the European sea bass. Findings: The F1 progeny analysed (n = 922) belonged to a small effective breeding population with contributions from an unbalanced family structure of just 10 males and 2 females. Heritability values ranged from 0.54 (+/- 0.21) for body weight to 0.65 (+/- 0.22) for standard body length and were low for cortisol response i.e. 0.08 (+/- 0.06). Genetic correlations were positive (0.94) between standard body length and body weight and negative between cortisol and body weight and between cortisol and standard body length (-0.60 and -0.55, respectively). Conclusion: This study confirms that in European sea bass, heritability of growth-related traits is high and that selection on such traits has potential. However, heritability of cortisol response to stress is low in European sea bass and since it is known to vary greatly among species, further studies are necessary to understand the reasons for these differences.
- Published
- 2012
33. Bacterial community analysis of activated sludge: an evaluation of four commonly used DNA extraction methods
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Vanysacker, L., Declerck, S.A.J., Hellemans, B., De Meester, L., Vankelecom, I., Declerck, P., Vanysacker, L., Declerck, S.A.J., Hellemans, B., De Meester, L., Vankelecom, I., and Declerck, P.
- Abstract
The effectiveness of three commercially available direct DNA isolation kits (Mobio, Fast, Qiagen) and one published direct DNA extraction protocol (Bead) for extracting bacterial DNA from different types of activated sludge was investigated and mutually compared. The DNA quantity and purity were determined using real-time PCR targeting the bacterial 16S rDNA gene. Microbial community fingerprints were assessed by automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis. The resulting community profiles were analyzed with canonical correspondence analysis. Our results clearly demonstrate that direct DNA extraction methods can significantly influence the DNA quantity, purity, and observed community patterns of microbiota in activated sludge. Fast and Mobio generated high amounts of good quality DNA compared to Bead and Qiagen. Mobio also resulted in the detection of the highest number of species while Fast scored the best in discriminating between the community patterns of different activated sludge types. With respect to the characterization of community profiles, our analyses demonstrated a strong sludge type dependent variability among methods. Taking into account our results, we recommend Fast as the most suitable DNA extraction method for activated sludge samples used for bacterial community studies., The effectiveness of three commercially available direct DNA isolation kits (Mobio, Fast, Qiagen) and one published direct DNA extraction protocol (Bead) for extracting bacterial DNA from different types of activated sludge was investigated and mutually compared. The DNA quantity and purity were determined using real-time PCR targeting the bacterial 16S rDNA gene. Microbial community fingerprints were assessed by automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis. The resulting community profiles were analyzed with canonical correspondence analysis. Our results clearly demonstrate that direct DNA extraction methods can significantly influence the DNA quantity, purity, and observed community patterns of microbiota in activated sludge. Fast and Mobio generated high amounts of good quality DNA compared to Bead and Qiagen. Mobio also resulted in the detection of the highest number of species while Fast scored the best in discriminating between the community patterns of different activated sludge types. With respect to the characterization of community profiles, our analyses demonstrated a strong sludge type dependent variability among methods. Taking into account our results, we recommend Fast as the most suitable DNA extraction method for activated sludge samples used for bacterial community studies.
- Published
- 2010
34. Isolation and characterization of a new suite of microsatellite markers in the European White Stork, Ciconia ciconia
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Shephard, J.M., Galbusera, P., Hellemans, B., Jusic, A., Akhandaf, Y., Shephard, J.M., Galbusera, P., Hellemans, B., Jusic, A., and Akhandaf, Y.
- Abstract
The White Stork (Ciconia ciconia) has an extensive European breeding distribution. There have been significant demographic changes since the 1930s, with country-specific extinctions throughout the western distribution since the mid-1940s. Following various reintroduction programs significant concerns have been raised about the geographic origins of introduced storks, and the effect this may have on individual biology, particularly breeding success. Here we report on seven new microsatellite markers developed for C. ciconia that have been successfully combined in a series of multiplex PCR's with six markers previously described for the Wood Stork.
- Published
- 2009
35. Preliminary data on genetic variation in the genus Clarias and Pangasius on the basis of DNA microsatellite loci
- Author
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Volckaert, F., Hellemans, B., Pouyaud, Laurent, Legendre, Marc (ed.), and Pariselle, Antoine (ed.)
- Subjects
STRUCTURE GENETIQUE ,ADN MICROSATELLITE ,POISSON D'EAU DOUCE ,MARQUEUR GENETIQUE ,ANALYSE GENETIQUE ,VARIABILITE GENETIQUE - Abstract
Fourteen dinucleotide DNA microsatellite loci were screened in the catfishes #Clarias gariepinus$, #C. batrachus$ and #Pangasius hypophthalmus$. They will be used for the screening of wild and cultured populations. (Résumé d'auteur)
- Published
- 1998
36. Isolation and characterization of microsatellite markers in the African catfish Clarias gariepinus (Burchell, 1822)
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Galbusera, P., Volckaert, F.A.M.J., Hellemans, B., and Ollevier, F.P.
- Subjects
Clarias gariepinus ,DNA ,Microsatellites - Published
- 1996
37. Timing of the population dynamics of bullhead Cottus gobio (Teleostei : Cottidae) during the Pleistocene
- Author
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Volckaert, F.A.M., Hänfling, B., Hellemans, B., Carvallo, G.R., Volckaert, F.A.M., Hänfling, B., Hellemans, B., and Carvallo, G.R.
- Abstract
Pleistocene genetic structure of the bullhead, Cottus gobio, was evaluated across the western Palearctic using a 771-bp long fragment of the mitochondrial control region in 123 individuals collected at 35 sites (data set I). In total, 59 haplotypes that differed at 73 positions (9.3%) were detected. Data analysis also included sequences from Englbrecht et al. (2000), thus increasing the sampling to a more comprehensive data set of 529 fish and 63 control region sequences of 482 bp (data set II). A minimum spanning and phylogenetic tree identified a seventh clade (Brittany–Loire) in addition to the previously identified six clades. The geographical range of the North Sea and Lower Rhine clades was considerably larger than thought previously. Haplotype diversity was generally low, and the total fixation index high (FST = 0.49). Among-group differentiation accounted for 41.7% (data set I) of the variation. Contiguous range expansions and restricted gene flow combined with isolation by distance, interspersed with past fragmentation characterize bullhead across its range. New is the knowledge that dated interglacial periods correlated with population expansions; river captures, proglacial lake systems and sea level played a significant role in the dispersal and expansion either in northern or southern direction. Hence it became possible to identify and date the colonization routes and putative palaeorefugia, most of which were located in Central and North-west Europe. Glacial periods resulted in distinct fragmentation events and lineage sorting.
- Published
- 2002
38. Late glacial history of the cold-adapted freshwater fish Cottus gobio, revealed by microsatellites
- Author
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Hänfling, B., Hellemans, B., Volckaert, F.A.M., Carvallo, G.R., Hänfling, B., Hellemans, B., Volckaert, F.A.M., and Carvallo, G.R.
- Abstract
The distribution of genetic diversity at 10 highly polymorphic microsatellite loci within the European freshwater fish, Cottus gobio , L. was examined. The sampling range comprised a large geographical scale including lineages known to be highly divergent at both mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and allozymes. An analysis of genetic variability within populations showed that expected heterozygosity and allelic richness could be explained largely by current effective population sizes. Evidence was found, however, that historical processes predating the last major glaciation affected allelic richness. In addition to confirming the large-scale patterns from earlier studies, the microsatellite data revealed new insights into recent processes by analysing genetic structure within ancient lineages defined by mtDNA data. Stepwise mutation model (SMM) and nonSMM-based methods demonstrated a clear genetic structuring within the Northwestern European lineage comprising populations from Britain and Belgium, and within the Central European lineage populations from the rivers Danube, Elbe and Main. Supported by an analysis of genetic variability within populations these results showed that the bullhead populations most probably persisted throughout the last major glaciation within the British Isles and within the drainages of the rivers Elbe and Main. Such observations provide the first genetic evidence for a glacial refugium in such close proximity to the European glacial margins.
- Published
- 2002
39. Unravelling the evolution of Africa's drainage basins through a widespread freshwater fish, the African sharptooth catfish Clarias gariepinus
- Author
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Bart Hellemans, Rouvay Roodt-Wilding, Allan D. Arndt, Stephan Koblmüller, Auguste Chocha Manda, Jean-Claude Micha, Maarten P.M. Vanhove, Belinda L. Swart, Jeroen Van Houdt, Filip Volckaert, Faustin Khang’Mate, Maarten Larmuseau, Maarten Van Steenberge, VAN STEENBERGE, Maarten, VANHOVE, Maarten, Manda, AC, Larmuseau, MHD, Swart, BL, Khang'Mate, F, Arndt, A, Hellemans, B., Van Houdt, J, Micha, JC, Koblmuller, S, Roodt-Wilding, R, Volckaert, FAM, Zoology, and Finnish Museum of Natural History
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Clarias gariepinus ,Drainage basin ,SOFTWARE ,GENETIC-STRUCTURE ,phylogeography ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,DISPERSAL ,ichthyofaunal provinces ,14. Life underwater ,Clariidae ,PHYLOGENIES ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,fish ,CICHLID FISHES ,0303 health sciences ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Ecology ,biology ,BURCHELL ,DNA ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,MODEL ,Fishery ,Phylogeography ,1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology ,Africa ,Freshwater fish ,RADIATION ,%22">Fish ,INFERENCE ,river basin - Abstract
Aim The formation history of Africa's current river basins remains largely unknown. In order to date changes in landscape and climate, we studied the biogeography of the African freshwater fish with the largest natural distribution. We also validated biogeographical units.Location Continental Africa.Taxon Clarias gariepinus sl.Methods We investigated mitochondrial cytb sequences of 443 individuals from 97 localities, using a haplotype network and a genetic landscape analysis. We inferred a dated phylogeny using maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference approaches and reconstructed ancestral areas with S-DEC and S-DIVA models. Microsatellite genotyping complemented the mitochondrial approach in the Congo basin, where the latter revealed complex patterns.Results Limited differentiation is found in northern and south-western Africa, and sharp genetic differentiation in the continent's east and centre. Populations with affinities to neighbouring basins occur at the edges of the Congo province. High diversity exists in the south of the Congo basin. The Zambezi province is partitioned into eastern, central and western sectors. In the east, specimens were related to those from the Congo. In the west, they were similar to Southern representatives. Phylogenetic inference placed the origin of C. gariepinus in the East Coast, with intraspecific diversification starting around the Great Lakes. These events occurred ca. 4.8-1.65 and 2.3-0.8 MYA respectively.Main conclusions Clades of C. gariepinus sl. show a clear geographical signature. The origin of C. gariepinus in the East Coast and diversification around the Great Lakes coincided with the periods of increased aridity. Low genetic differentiation in northern and southern Africa may result from connectivity during recent periods of higher rainfall. In contrast to other widespread African freshwater fish, colonization rather than extinction seemed to mediate distribution patterns. This can be explained by a high ecological tolerance. We highlight the species' suitability to study landscape and climate evolution at various scales. A.A. received a postdoctoral research fellowship from the KU Leuven and the Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO). M.V.S. and M.P.M.V. received PhD fellowships from FWO. MVS received travel grants of the FWO and the Leopold III funds for Nature Exploration and Conservation. A.C.M. received support from the Belgian Development Agency and the BTCCTB project PRODEPAAK. We sincerely thank the following colleagues for sample collection: J.-F. Agnèse, B. Benade, R. Bills, L. and G. Chapman, P. de Villiers, the late L. De Vos, J. Engelbrecht, P. Fouche, P. Galbusera, K. Goudswaard, D. Impson, R. Karssing, J. Munyandorero, A. Piers, C. Maguswi, J. Southey, the late G. Teugels, K. Van Lerberghe and the Department of Fisheries and Agriculture of Zambia. We benefited from insights from J.-F. Agnèse, T. Huyse, J. Maley, P. Skelton, J. Snoeks, K. Van Doninck and C. Sturmbauer. This study was performed on historical collections and on samples collected by researchers from certified institutes of the countries where collections were made. All material was collected prior to the implementation of the Nagoya protocol for access and benefit sharing.
- Published
- 2020
40. Contrasting population genetic responses to migration barriers in two native and an invasive freshwater fish.
- Author
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Deflem IS, Calboli FCF, Christiansen H, Hellemans B, Raeymaekers JAM, and Volckaert FAM
- Abstract
Habitat fragmentation impacts the distribution of genetic diversity and population genetic structure. Therefore, protecting the evolutionary potential of species, especially in the context of the current rate of human-induced environmental change, is an important goal. In riverine ecosystems, migration barriers affect the genetic structure of native species, while also influencing the spread of invasive species. In this study, we compare genetic patterns of two native and one highly invasive riverine fish species in a Belgian river basin, namely the native three-spined stickleback ( Gasterosteus aculeatus ) and stone loach ( Barbatula barbatula ), and the non-native and invasive topmouth gudgeon ( Pseudorasbora parva ). We aimed to characterize both natural and anthropogenic determinants of genetic diversity and population genetic connectivity. Genetic diversity was highest in topmouth gudgeon, followed by stone loach and three-spined stickleback. The correlation between downstream distance and genetic diversity, a pattern often observed in riverine systems, was only marginally significant in stone loach and three-spined stickleback, while genetic diversity strongly declined with increasing number of barriers in topmouth gudgeon. An Isolation-By-Distance pattern characterizes the population genetic structure of each species. Population differentiation was only associated with migration barriers in the invasive topmouth gudgeon, while genetic composition of all species seemed at least partially determined by the presence of migration barriers. Among the six barrier types considered (watermills, sluices, tunnels, weirs, riverbed obstructions, and others), the presence of watermills was the strongest driver of genetic structure and composition. Our results indicate that conservation and restoration actions, focusing on conserving genetic patterns, cannot be generalized across species. Moreover, measures might target either on restoring connectivity, while risking a rapid spread of the invasive topmouth gudgeon, or not restoring connectivity, while risking native species extinction in upstream populations., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (© 2022 The Authors. Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Association between Chromosome 4 and mercury accumulation in muscle of the three-spined stickleback ( Gasterosteus aculeatus ).
- Author
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Calboli FCF, Delahaut V, Deflem I, Hablützel PI, Hellemans B, Kordas A, Raeymaekers JAM, Bervoets L, De Boeck G, and Volckaert FAM
- Abstract
Anthropogenic stressors, such as pollutants, act as selective factors that can leave measurable changes in allele frequencies in the genome. Metals are of particular concern among pollutants, because of interference with vital biological pathways. We use the three-spined stickleback as a model for adaptation to mercury pollution in natural populations. We collected sticklebacks from 21 locations in Flanders (Belgium), measured the accumulated levels of mercury in the skeletal muscle tissue, and genotyped the fish by sequencing (GBS). The spread of muscle mercury content across locations was considerable, ranging from 21.5 to 327 ng/g dry weight (DW). We then conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) between 28,450 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and the accumulated levels of mercury, using different approaches. Based on a linear mixed model analysis, the GWAS yielded multiple hits with a single top hit on Chromosome 4, with eight more SNPs suggestive of association. A second approach, a latent factor mixed model analysis, highlighted one single SNP on Chromosome 11. Finally, an outlier test identified one additional SNP on Chromosome 4 that appeared under selection. Out of all ten SNPs we identified as associated with mercury in muscle, three SNPs all located on Chromosome 4 and positioned within a 2.5 kb distance of an annotated gene. Based on these results and the genome coverage of our SNPs, we conclude that the selective effect of mercury pollution in Flanders causes a significant association with at least one locus on Chromosome 4 in three-spined stickleback., Competing Interests: The authors have declared no conflict of interest., (© 2021 The Authors. Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
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42. Facilitating population genomics of non-model organisms through optimized experimental design for reduced representation sequencing.
- Author
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Christiansen H, Heindler FM, Hellemans B, Jossart Q, Pasotti F, Robert H, Verheye M, Danis B, Kochzius M, Leliaert F, Moreau C, Patel T, Van de Putte AP, Vanreusel A, Volckaert FAM, and Schön I
- Subjects
- Animals, Genome, Genomics, Humans, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Metagenomics, Research Design
- Abstract
Background: Genome-wide data are invaluable to characterize differentiation and adaptation of natural populations. Reduced representation sequencing (RRS) subsamples a genome repeatedly across many individuals. However, RRS requires careful optimization and fine-tuning to deliver high marker density while being cost-efficient. The number of genomic fragments created through restriction enzyme digestion and the sequencing library setup must match to achieve sufficient sequencing coverage per locus. Here, we present a workflow based on published information and computational and experimental procedures to investigate and streamline the applicability of RRS., Results: In an iterative process genome size estimates, restriction enzymes and size selection windows were tested and scaled in six classes of Antarctic animals (Ostracoda, Malacostraca, Bivalvia, Asteroidea, Actinopterygii, Aves). Achieving high marker density would be expensive in amphipods, the malacostracan target taxon, due to the large genome size. We propose alternative approaches such as mitogenome or target capture sequencing for this group. Pilot libraries were sequenced for all other target taxa. Ostracods, bivalves, sea stars, and fish showed overall good coverage and marker numbers for downstream population genomic analyses. In contrast, the bird test library produced low coverage and few polymorphic loci, likely due to degraded DNA., Conclusions: Prior testing and optimization are important to identify which groups are amenable for RRS and where alternative methods may currently offer better cost-benefit ratios. The steps outlined here are easy to follow for other non-model taxa with little genomic resources, thus stimulating efficient resource use for the many pressing research questions in molecular ecology., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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43. Adaptive Divergence under Gene Flow along an Environmental Gradient in Two Coexisting Stickleback Species.
- Author
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Bal TMP, Llanos-Garrido A, Chaturvedi A, Verdonck I, Hellemans B, and Raeymaekers JAM
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Physiological, Animals, Belgium, Gene Flow, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Netherlands, Organic Chemicals, Sequence Analysis, DNA veterinary, Smegmamorpha genetics, Genotyping Techniques veterinary, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Smegmamorpha classification, Smegmamorpha physiology
- Abstract
There is a general and solid theoretical framework to explain how the interplay between natural selection and gene flow affects local adaptation. Yet, to what extent coexisting closely related species evolve collectively or show distinctive evolutionary responses remains a fundamental question. To address this, we studied the population genetic structure and morphological differentiation of sympatric three-spined and nine-spined stickleback. We conducted genotyping-by-sequencing and morphological trait characterisation using 24 individuals of each species from four lowland brackish water (LBW), four lowland freshwater (LFW) and three upland freshwater (UFW) sites in Belgium and the Netherlands. This combination of sites allowed us to contrast populations from isolated but environmentally similar locations (LFW vs. UFW), isolated but environmentally heterogeneous locations (LBW vs. UFW), and well-connected but environmentally heterogenous locations (LBW vs. LFW). Overall, both species showed comparable levels of genetic diversity and neutral genetic differentiation. However, for all three spatial scales, signatures of morphological and genomic adaptive divergence were substantially stronger among populations of the three-spined stickleback than among populations of the nine-spined stickleback. Furthermore, most outlier SNPs in the two species were associated with local freshwater sites. The few outlier SNPs that were associated with the split between brackish water and freshwater populations were located on one linkage group in three-spined stickleback and two linkage groups in nine-spined stickleback. We conclude that while both species show congruent evolutionary and genomic patterns of divergent selection, both species differ in the magnitude of their response to selection regardless of the geographical and environmental context.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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44. Adaptive and non-adaptive divergence in a common landscape.
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Raeymaekers JAM, Chaturvedi A, Hablützel PI, Verdonck I, Hellemans B, Maes GE, De Meester L, and Volckaert FAM
- Subjects
- Animals, Biodiversity, Genome, Phenotype, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Salinity, Species Specificity, Biological Evolution, Environment, Smegmamorpha genetics
- Abstract
Species in a common landscape often face similar selective environments. The capacity of organisms to adapt to these environments may be largely species specific. Quantifying shared and unique adaptive responses across species within landscapes may thus improve our understanding of landscape-moderated biodiversity patterns. Here we test to what extent populations of two coexisting and phylogenetically related fishes-three-spined and nine-spined stickleback-differ in the strength and nature of neutral and adaptive divergence along a salinity gradient. Phenotypic differentiation, neutral genetic differentiation and genomic signatures of adaptation are stronger in the three-spined stickleback. Yet, both species show substantial phenotypic parallelism. In contrast, genomic signatures of adaptation involve different genomic regions, and are thus non-parallel. The relative contribution of spatial and environmental drivers of population divergence in each species reflects different strategies for persistence in the same landscape. These results provide insight in the mechanisms underlying variation in evolutionary versatility and ecological success among species within landscapes.The three-spined stickleback is a model species for the study of adaptive divergence. Here, Raeymaekers et al. compare how the three-spined stickleback and its relative the nine-spined stickleback vary at the phenotypic and genomic levels in response to the same spatial and environmental drivers.
- Published
- 2017
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45. Hidden biodiversity in an ancient lake: phylogenetic congruence between Lake Tanganyika tropheine cichlids and their monogenean flatworm parasites.
- Author
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Vanhove MP, Pariselle A, Van Steenberge M, Raeymaekers JA, Hablützel PI, Gillardin C, Hellemans B, Breman FC, Koblmüller S, Sturmbauer C, Snoeks J, Volckaert FA, and Huyse T
- Subjects
- Animals, Biodiversity, Lakes, Phylogeny, Biological Evolution, Cichlids genetics, Cichlids parasitology, Gills parasitology, Host-Parasite Interactions genetics, Platyhelminths genetics
- Abstract
The stunning diversity of cichlid fishes has greatly enhanced our understanding of speciation and radiation. Little is known about the evolution of cichlid parasites. Parasites are abundant components of biodiversity, whose diversity typically exceeds that of their hosts. In the first comprehensive phylogenetic parasitological analysis of a vertebrate radiation, we study monogenean parasites infecting tropheine cichlids from Lake Tanganyika. Monogeneans are flatworms usually infecting the body surface and gills of fishes. In contrast to many other parasites, they depend only on a single host species to complete their lifecycle. Our spatially comprehensive combined nuclear-mitochondrial DNA dataset of the parasites covering almost all tropheine host species (N = 18), reveals species-rich parasite assemblages and shows consistent host-specificity. Statistical comparisons of host and parasite phylogenies based on distance and topology-based tests demonstrate significant congruence and suggest that host-switching is rare. Molecular rate evaluation indicates that species of Cichlidogyrus probably diverged synchronically with the initial radiation of the tropheines. They further diversified through within-host speciation into an overlooked species radiation. The unique life history and specialisation of certain parasite groups has profound evolutionary consequences. Hence, evolutionary parasitology adds a new dimension to the study of biodiversity hotspots like Lake Tanganyika.
- Published
- 2015
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46. Microsatellite primers for the gynodioecious grassland perennial Saxifraga granulata (Saxifragaceae).
- Author
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van der Meer S, Van Houdt JK, Maes GE, Hellemans B, and Jacquemyn H
- Abstract
Premise of the Study: Nine polymorphic and 12 monomorphic microsatellite loci (simple sequence repeats [SSRs]) were isolated and characterized for the gynodioecious grassland perennial Saxifraga granulata. •, Methods and Results: Based on genomic screening of leaf material of four individuals from four populations, a total of 21 microsatellite primer pairs were designed for S. granulata. Nine loci were polymorphic and were optimized into two PCR multiplex reactions and tested on 100 individuals from five riparian populations from central Belgium. The number of alleles of the polymorphic loci ranged from three to 18, and gametic heterozygosity ranged from 0.26 to 0.94. •, Conclusions: The markers that are presented here are the first microsatellite markers reported for S. granulata and will be used to assess how river systems shape the spatial genetic structure and diversity of riparian populations of this species.
- Published
- 2014
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47. Heritability of cortisol response to confinement stress in European sea bass dicentrarchus labrax.
- Author
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Volckaert FA, Hellemans B, Batargias C, Louro B, Massault C, Van Houdt JK, Haley C, de Koning DJ, and Canario AV
- Subjects
- Animals, Bass physiology, Body Weights and Measures, Female, Genetic Association Studies, Genetic Loci, Genotyping Techniques, Hydrocortisone genetics, Male, Microsatellite Repeats, Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction, Pedigree, Phenotype, Quantitative Trait Loci, Stress, Physiological genetics, Stress, Psychological genetics, Bass genetics, Hydrocortisone blood, Stress, Psychological blood
- Abstract
Background: In fish, the most studied production traits in terms of heritability are body weight or growth, stress or disease resistance, while heritability of cortisol levels, widely used as a measure of response to stress, is less studied. In this study, we have estimated heritabilities of two growth traits (body weight and length) and of cortisol response to confinement stress in the European sea bass., Findings: The F1 progeny analysed (n = 922) belonged to a small effective breeding population with contributions from an unbalanced family structure of just 10 males and 2 females. Heritability values ranged from 0.54 (± 0.21) for body weight to 0.65 (± 0.22) for standard body length and were low for cortisol response i.e. 0.08 (± 0.06). Genetic correlations were positive (0.94) between standard body length and body weight and negative between cortisol and body weight and between cortisol and standard body length (-0.60 and -0.55, respectively)., Conclusion: This study confirms that in European sea bass, heritability of growth-related traits is high and that selection on such traits has potential. However, heritability of cortisol response to stress is low in European sea bass and since it is known to vary greatly among species, further studies are necessary to understand the reasons for these differences.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Bacterial community analysis of activated sludge: an evaluation of four commonly used DNA extraction methods.
- Author
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Vanysacker L, Declerck SA, Hellemans B, De Meester L, Vankelecom I, and Declerck P
- Subjects
- DNA Fingerprinting, DNA, Ribosomal genetics, DNA, Ribosomal Spacer genetics, Polymerase Chain Reaction, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Bacteria classification, Bacteria genetics, Bacteriological Techniques methods, Biodiversity, DNA, Bacterial genetics, DNA, Bacterial isolation & purification, Sewage microbiology
- Abstract
The effectiveness of three commercially available direct DNA isolation kits (Mobio, Fast, Qiagen) and one published direct DNA extraction protocol (Bead) for extracting bacterial DNA from different types of activated sludge was investigated and mutually compared. The DNA quantity and purity were determined using real-time PCR targeting the bacterial 16S rDNA gene. Microbial community fingerprints were assessed by automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis. The resulting community profiles were analyzed with canonical correspondence analysis. Our results clearly demonstrate that direct DNA extraction methods can significantly influence the DNA quantity, purity, and observed community patterns of microbiota in activated sludge. Fast and Mobio generated high amounts of good quality DNA compared to Bead and Qiagen. Mobio also resulted in the detection of the highest number of species while Fast scored the best in discriminating between the community patterns of different activated sludge types. With respect to the characterization of community profiles, our analyses demonstrated a strong sludge type dependent variability among methods. Taking into account our results, we recommend Fast as the most suitable DNA extraction method for activated sludge samples used for bacterial community studies.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Community structure, population structure and topographical specialisation of Gyrodactylus (monogenea) ectoparasites living on sympatric stickleback species.
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Raeymaekers JA, Huyse T, Maelfait H, Hellemans B, and Volckaert FA
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- Animals, Body Size, Ecosystem, Female, Male, Population Dynamics, Seasons, Sex Characteristics, Smegmamorpha classification, Smegmamorpha genetics, Species Specificity, Time Factors, Trematode Infections parasitology, Fish Diseases parasitology, Smegmamorpha parasitology, Trematoda classification, Trematoda parasitology, Trematode Infections veterinary
- Abstract
In order to disentangle the contribution of host and parasite biology to host specificity, we compared the structure and population dynamics of the Gyrodactylus (von Nordmann, 1832) flatworm community living on sympatric three-spined Gasterosteus aculeatus L. and nine-spined Pungitius pungitius (L.) stickleback. Between April 2002 and March 2003, a small lowland creek was sampled monthly. Species identity of about 75% of the worms per host was determined with a genetic nuclear marker (ITS1). Each stickleback species hosted a characteristic gill- and fin-parasitic Gyrodactylus: G. arcuatus Bychowsky, 1933 and G. gasterostei Gläser, 1974 respectively infecting the three-spined stickleback, with G. rarus Wegener, 1910 and G. pungitii Malmberg, 1964 infecting the nine-spined stickleback. Host size and seasonal dynamics were strong determinants of parasite abundance. A strong interaction between host and parasite species determined infection levels and affected three levels of parasite organisation: community structure, population structure and topographical specialisation. Community and population structure were shaped by asymmetric cross-infections, resulting in a net transmission of the Gyro-dactylus species typical of the nine-spined stickleback towards the three-spined stickleback. Host density was not a major determinant of parasite exchange. Aggregation and topographical specialisation of the Gyrodactylus species of the three-spined stickleback were more pronounced than that of the nine-spined stickleback.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A microsatellite linkage map of the European sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax L.
- Author
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Chistiakov DA, Hellemans B, Haley CS, Law AS, Tsigenopoulos CS, Kotoulas G, Bertotto D, Libertini A, and Volckaert FA
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Bass embryology, Cells, Cultured, Chromosomes, Female, Genetic Markers, Haploidy, Heterozygote, Karyotyping, Lod Score, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Polymorphism, Genetic, RNA, Messenger genetics, Recombination, Genetic, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Bass genetics, Chromosome Mapping, Genetic Linkage, Microsatellite Repeats
- Abstract
A genetic linkage map of the European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) was constructed from 174 microsatellite markers, including 145 new markers reported in this study. The mapping panel was derived from farmed sea bass from the North Adriatic Sea and consisted of a single family including both parents and 50 full-sib progeny (biparental diploids). A total of 162 microsatellites were mapped in 25 linkage groups. Eleven loci represent type I (coding) markers; 2 loci are located within the peptide Y (linkage group 1) and cytochrome P450 aromatase (linkage group 6) genes. The sex-averaged map spans 814.5 cM of the sea bass genome. The female map covers 905.9 cM, whereas the male map covers only 567.4 cM. The constructed map represents the first linkage map of European sea bass, one of the most important aquaculture species in Europe.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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