Cho Young-Ghan, Kwon Kyungman, Rho Hyun Soo, Min Won-Gi, Jeung Hee-Do, Hwang Un-Ki, Ryu Yong-Kyun, Park Areumi, Hong Hyun-Ki, Shin Jong-Seop, Yang Hyun-Sung
Tidal Flat Research Center, National Institute of Fisheries Science, 405 Gangbyeonro, Gunsan 54042, Republic of Korea.
Tropical & Subtropical Research Center, Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology (KIOST), Jeju 63349, Republic of Korea.
Animals (Basel). 2025 May 2;15(9):1321. doi: 10.3390/ani15091321.
, a commercially and ecologically significant marine gastropod traditionally found in Jeju Island and the southern coast of Korea, is experiencing a reported northward expansion into the East Sea, likely influenced by rising seawater temperatures. This study provides preliminary genetic insights into the genetic structure and connectivity of populations between Jeju and the East Sea using mitochondrial COI sequences. Samples from 6 geographically distinct locations were analyzed, with three cloned replicates generated to enhance sequence reliability. Genetic diversity, haplotype distribution, and population differentiation were then assessed. Our analysis reveals potential genetic connectivity between Jeju and East Sea populations, possibly driven by larval dispersal via the Kuroshio and Tsushima Currents, highlighted by the predominance of shared haplotype EJ1 (60.0% in Jeju, 50.0% in East Sea). Bayesian phylogenetic analysis estimated the time to the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) between Jeju and East Sea populations at approximately 9.7 to 23.3 million years ago, indicating ancient divergence rather than very recent separation. Pairwise FST values and AMOVA results showed generally low levels of genetic differentiation. Given the small sample sizes and use of a single mitochondrial marker, these findings should be interpreted cautiously as preliminary evidence. Nevertheless, this study highlights the need for continued genetic monitoring of populations under climate-driven range shifts and provides a foundation for future research incorporating broader genomic approaches.
[某种海洋腹足纲动物名称]是一种在商业和生态方面都具有重要意义的海洋腹足纲动物,传统上在济州岛和韩国南部海岸被发现,据报道它正在向北扩展到东海,这可能受到海水温度上升的影响。本研究利用线粒体COI序列,对济州岛和东海之间[该动物]种群的遗传结构和连通性提供了初步的遗传学见解。分析了来自6个地理上不同位置的样本,并生成了三个克隆复制品以提高序列可靠性。然后评估了遗传多样性、单倍型分布和种群分化。我们的分析揭示了济州岛和东海种群之间潜在的遗传连通性,这可能是由通过黑潮和对马暖流的幼虫扩散驱动的,共享单倍型EJ1的优势突出显示了这一点(在济州岛占60.0%,在东海占50.0%)。贝叶斯系统发育分析估计,济州岛和东海种群之间最近共同祖先(MRCA)的时间约为970万至2330万年前,表明是古老的分化而非最近的分离。成对FST值和AMOVA结果显示遗传分化水平普遍较低。鉴于样本量小且使用单一线粒体标记,这些发现应作为初步证据谨慎解释。尽管如此,本研究强调了在气候驱动的范围变化下对[该动物]种群进行持续遗传监测的必要性,并为未来纳入更广泛基因组方法的研究奠定了基础。