Bester-van der Merwe Aletta E, Bitalo Daphne, Cuevas Juan M, Ovenden Jennifer, Hernández Sebastián, da Silva Charlene, McCord Meaghen, Roodt-Wilding Rouvay
Department of Genetics, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa.
Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP), División Zoología Vertebrados, Museo de La Plata, La Plata, Argentina.
PLoS One. 2017 Sep 7;12(9):e0184481. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184481. eCollection 2017.
The tope shark (Galeorhinus galeus Linnaeus, 1758) is a temperate, coastal hound shark found in the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific oceans. In this study, the population structure of Galeorhinus galeus was determined across the entire Southern Hemisphere, where the species is heavily targeted by commercial fisheries, as well as locally, along the South African coastline. Analysis was conducted on a total of 185 samples using 19 microsatellite markers and a 671 bp fragment of the NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 (ND2) gene. Across the Southern Hemisphere, three geographically distinct clades were recovered, including one from South America (Argentina, Chile), one from Africa (all the South African collections) and an Australia-New Zealand clade. Nuclear data revealed significant population subdivisions (FST = 0.192 to 0.376, p<0.05) indicating limited gene flow for tope sharks across ocean basins. Marked population connectivity was however evident across the Indian Ocean based on Bayesian clustering analysis. More locally in South Africa, F-statistics and multivariate analysis supported moderate to high gene flow across the Atlantic/Indian Ocean boundary (FST = 0.035 to 0.044, p<0.05), with exception of samples from Struisbaai and Port Elizabeth which differed significantly from the rest. Discriminant and Bayesian clustering analysis indicated admixture in all sampling populations, decreasing from west to east, corroborating possible restriction to gene flow across regional oceanographic barriers. Mitochondrial sequence data recovered seven haplotypes (h = 0.216, π = 0.001) for South Africa, with one major haplotype shared by 87% of the individuals and at least one private haplotype for each sampling location except Port Elizabeth. As with many other coastal shark species with cosmopolitan distribution, this study confirms the lack of both historical dispersal and inter-oceanic gene flow while also implicating contemporary factors such as oceanic currents and thermal fronts to drive local genetic structure of G. galeus on a smaller spatial scale.
姥鲨(Galeorhinus galeus Linnaeus,1758)是一种分布于温带沿海的猎鲨,见于大西洋和印度洋 - 太平洋海域。在本研究中,我们确定了姥鲨在整个南半球的种群结构,该物种在南半球受到商业渔业的大量捕捞,同时在南非海岸线沿线也面临局部捕捞压力。我们使用19个微卫星标记和NADH脱氢酶亚基2(ND2)基因的一段671 bp片段,对总共185个样本进行了分析。在整个南半球,我们识别出三个地理上不同的分支,一个来自南美洲(阿根廷、智利),一个来自非洲(所有南非采集样本),以及一个澳大利亚 - 新西兰分支。核数据显示出显著的种群细分(FST = 0.192至0.376,p<0.05),这表明姥鲨在各大洋盆地之间的基因流动有限。然而,基于贝叶斯聚类分析,印度洋内明显存在显著的种群连通性。在南非本地,F统计量和多变量分析支持大西洋/印度洋边界两侧存在中度到高度的基因流动(FST = 0.035至0.044,p<0.05),但斯特鲁伊斯湾和伊丽莎白港的样本除外,它们与其他样本有显著差异。判别分析和贝叶斯聚类分析表明,所有采样种群中都存在混合现象,且从西向东逐渐减少,这证实了区域海洋学屏障可能对基因流动产生限制。线粒体序列数据显示,南非有7种单倍型(h = 0.216,π = 0.001),其中一种主要单倍型为87%的个体所共有,除伊丽莎白港外,每个采样地点至少有一个私有单倍型。与许多其他具有全球分布的沿海鲨鱼物种一样,本研究证实了历史扩散和跨洋基因流动的缺乏,同时也暗示了诸如洋流和热锋等当代因素在较小空间尺度上驱动了姥鲨的局部遗传结构。