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鲸鲨(Rhincodon typus)三个主要海洋种群间的低遗传分化。

Low genetic differentiation across three major ocean populations of the whale shark, Rhincodon typus.

作者信息

Schmidt Jennifer V, Schmidt Claudia L, Ozer Fusun, Ernst Robin E, Feldheim Kevin A, Ashley Mary V, Levine Marie

机构信息

The Department of Biological Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2009;4(4):e4988. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004988. Epub 2009 Apr 7.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Whale sharks are a declining species for which little biological data is available. While these animals are protected in many parts of their range, they are fished legally and illegally in some countries. Baseline biological and ecological data are needed to allow the formulation of an effective conservation plan for whale sharks. It is not known, for example, whether the whale shark is represented by a single worldwide panmictic population or by numerous, reproductively isolated populations. Genetic analysis of population structure is one essential component of the baseline data required for whale shark conservation.

METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We have identified 8 polymorphic microsatellites in the whale shark and used these markers to assess genetic variation and population structure in a panel of whale sharks covering a broad geographic region. This is the first record of microsatellite loci in the whale shark, which displayed an average of 9 alleles per locus and mean H(o) = 0.66 and H(e) = 0.69. All but one of the eight loci meet the expectations of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. Analysis of these loci in whale sharks representing three major portions of their range, the Pacific (P), Caribbean (C), and Indian (I) Oceans, determined that there is little population differentiation between animals sampled in different geographic regions, indicating historical gene flow between populations. F(ST) values for inter-ocean comparisons were low (PxC = 0.0387, CxI = 0.0296 and PxI = -0.0022), and only CxI approached statistical significance (p = 0.0495).

CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We have shown only low levels of genetic differentiation between geographically distinct whale shark populations. Existing satellite tracking data have revealed both regional and long-range migration of whale sharks throughout their range, which supports the finding of gene flow between populations. Whale sharks traverse geographic and political boundaries during their life history and interbreed with animals from distant populations; conservation efforts must therefore target international protection for this species.

摘要

背景

鲸鲨是一种数量正在减少的物种,目前关于它们的生物学数据很少。虽然这些动物在其分布范围的许多地区都受到保护,但在一些国家仍存在合法和非法捕捞的情况。需要基线生物学和生态学数据来制定有效的鲸鲨保护计划。例如,目前尚不清楚鲸鲨是由一个单一的全球随机交配种群代表,还是由众多生殖隔离的种群代表。种群结构的遗传分析是鲸鲨保护所需基线数据的一个重要组成部分。

方法/主要发现:我们在鲸鲨中鉴定出8个多态微卫星,并使用这些标记评估了一组覆盖广泛地理区域的鲸鲨的遗传变异和种群结构。这是鲸鲨微卫星位点的首次记录,每个位点平均显示9个等位基因,平均观察杂合度(H(o))= 0.66,期望杂合度(H(e))= 0.69。8个位点中除1个外均符合哈迪-温伯格平衡预期。对代表其分布范围三个主要部分(太平洋(P)、加勒比海(C)和印度洋(I))的鲸鲨的这些位点进行分析,确定在不同地理区域采样的动物之间种群分化很小,这表明种群之间存在历史基因流动。跨洋比较的F(ST)值较低(PxC = 0.0387,CxI = 0.0296,PxI = -0.0022),只有CxI接近统计学显著性(p = 0.0495)。

结论/意义:我们已经表明,在地理上不同的鲸鲨种群之间只有低水平的遗传分化。现有的卫星追踪数据显示,鲸鲨在其整个分布范围内既有区域迁移也有远距离迁移,这支持了种群之间基因流动的发现。鲸鲨在其生活史中穿越地理和政治边界,并与来自遥远种群的动物杂交;因此,保护工作必须针对对该物种的国际保护。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/1f0e/2662413/89d213b61cc0/pone.0004988.g001.jpg

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