Johansson M L, Banks M A, Glunt K D, Hassel-Finnegan H M, Buonaccorsi V P
Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station, Hatfield Marine Science Center, Oregon State University, 2030 SE Marine Science Drive, Newport, OR 97365, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2008 Jul;17(13):3051-61. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2008.03814.x. Epub 2008 May 30.
The copper rockfish is a benthic, nonmigratory, temperate rocky reef marine species with pelagic larvae and juveniles. A previous range-wide study of the population-genetic structure of copper rockfish revealed a pattern consistent with isolation-by-distance. This could arise from an intrinsically limited dispersal capability in the species or from regularly-spaced extrinsic barriers that restrict gene flow (offshore jets that advect larvae offshore and/or habitat patchiness). Tissue samples were collected along the West Coast of the contiguous USA between Neah Bay, WA and San Diego, CA, with dense sampling along Oregon. At the whole-coast scale (approximately 2200 km), significant population subdivision (F(ST) = 0.0042), and a significant correlation between genetic and geographical distance were observed based on 11 microsatellite DNA loci. Population divergence was also significant among Oregon collections (approximately 450 km, F(ST) = 0.001). Hierarchical amova identified a weak but significant 130-km habitat break as a possible barrier to gene flow within Oregon, across which we estimated that dispersal (N(e)m) is half that of the coast-wide average. However, individual-based Bayesian analyses failed to identify more than a single population along the Oregon coast. In addition, no correlation between pairwise population genetic and geographical distances was detected at this scale. The offshore jet at Cape Blanco was not a significant barrier to gene flow in this species. These findings are consistent with low larval dispersal distances calculated in previous studies on this species, support a mesoscale dispersal model, and highlight the importance of continuity of habitat and adult population size in maintaining gene flow.
铜岩鱼是一种底栖、不洄游的温带岩礁海洋物种,其幼体和稚体为浮游性。此前一项针对铜岩鱼种群遗传结构的全范围研究揭示了一种与距离隔离相符的模式。这可能源于该物种内在有限的扩散能力,或者源于限制基因流动的规则间隔的外部屏障(将幼体输送到近海的近海急流和/或栖息地斑块)。沿着美国本土西海岸,在华盛顿州的尼亚湾和加利福尼亚州的圣地亚哥之间采集了组织样本,在俄勒冈州进行了密集采样。在全海岸尺度(约2200公里)上,基于11个微卫星DNA位点,观察到显著的种群细分(F(ST)=0.0042),以及遗传距离与地理距离之间的显著相关性。在俄勒冈州的样本之间(约450公里,F(ST)=0.001)种群分化也很显著。层次分析分子变异(AMOVA)确定了一个130公里的微弱但显著的栖息地断点,它可能是俄勒冈州内基因流动的一个屏障,据估计,跨越该断点的扩散(N(e)m)是全海岸平均水平的一半。然而,基于个体的贝叶斯分析未能识别出俄勒冈海岸沿线不止一个种群。此外,在这个尺度上未检测到成对种群遗传距离与地理距离之间的相关性。布兰科角的近海急流对该物种的基因流动不是一个显著的屏障。这些发现与此前该物种研究中计算出的低幼体扩散距离一致,支持了中尺度扩散模型,并突出了栖息地连续性和成年种群规模在维持基因流动中的重要性。