Gold J R, Burridge C P, Turner T F
Center for Biosystematics and Biodiversity, Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station 77843-2258, USA.
Genetica. 2001;111(1-3):305-17. doi: 10.1023/a:1013705230346.
Genetic studies of population or 'stock' structure in exploited marine fishes typically are designed to determine whether geographic boundaries useful for conservation and management planning are identifiable. Implicit in many such studies is the notion that subpopulations or stocks, if they exist, have fixed territories with little or no gene exchange between them. Herein, we review our long-term genetic studies of red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus), an estuarine-dependent sciaenid fish in the Gulf of Mexico and western Atlantic Ocean. Significant differences in frequencies of mitochondrial DNA haplotypes and of alleles at nuclear-encoded microsatellites occur among red drum sampled across the northern Gulf of Mexico. The spatial distribution of the genetic variation, however, follows a pattern of isolation-by-distance consistent with the hypothesis that gene flow occurs among subpopulations and is an inverse (and continuous) function of geographic distance. However, successful reproduction and recruitment of red drum depend on estuarine habitats that have geographically discrete boundaries. We hypothesize that population structure in red drum follows a modified one-dimensional, linear stepping-stone model where gene exchange occurs primarily (but not exclusively) between adjacent bays and estuaries distributed linearly along the coastline. Gene flow does occur among estuaries that are not adjacent but probabilities of gene exchange decrease as a function of geographic distance. Implications of our hypothesis are discussed in terms of inferences drawn from patterns of isolation-by-distance and relative to conservation and management of estuarine-dependent species like red drum. Based on estimates of the ratio of genetic effective population size and census size in red drum, observed patterns of gene flow in red drum may play a significant role in recruitment.
对已开发海洋鱼类的种群或“群体”结构进行的遗传学研究通常旨在确定是否能够识别出对保护和管理规划有用的地理边界。许多此类研究中隐含的概念是,亚种群或群体(如果存在的话)拥有固定的领地,它们之间很少或没有基因交流。在此,我们回顾了对红鼓鱼(眼斑拟石首鱼)进行的长期遗传学研究,红鼓鱼是墨西哥湾和西大西洋一种依赖河口生存的石首鱼科鱼类。在墨西哥湾北部采集的红鼓鱼样本中,线粒体DNA单倍型频率和核编码微卫星等位基因频率存在显著差异。然而,遗传变异的空间分布遵循距离隔离模式,这与亚种群之间存在基因流动且是地理距离的反函数(且连续)这一假设一致。然而,红鼓鱼的成功繁殖和补充依赖于具有地理上离散边界的河口栖息地。我们假设红鼓鱼的种群结构遵循一种经过修改的一维线性 stepping-stone 模型,其中基因交换主要(但非唯一)发生在沿海岸线线性分布的相邻海湾和河口之间。不相邻的河口之间确实会发生基因流动,但基因交换的概率会随着地理距离的增加而降低。我们从距离隔离模式得出的推论以及相对于像红鼓鱼这样依赖河口的物种的保护和管理,讨论了我们这一假设的含义。基于对红鼓鱼遗传有效种群大小与普查大小之比的估计,红鼓鱼中观察到的基因流动模式可能在补充过程中发挥重要作用。