Variation in anonymous and EST-microsatellites suggests adaptive population divergence in turbot

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers
ISSN: 0171-8630
E-ISSN: 1616-1599

Publication date

Advisors

Tutors

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Inter-Research
Metrics
Google Scholar
lacobus
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

We studied the variation at 30 anonymous and 30 expressed sequence tag (EST)-associated microsatellites in 4 natural populations of turbot Scophthalmus maximus living in habitats with different salinity and temperature conditions. We identified putative divergent selection effects on 3 genes: the fibroblast growth factor receptor, the β microglobuline, and the trap alpha gene for translocon associate protein. The markers closely linked to these genes showed significant deviations from the neutral expectations using 2 different statistical methods in several pairwise population comparisons involving samples from salty and brackish environments. Our results confirmed the weak genetic structure among populations from the northeast Atlantic and the low but significant genetic differentiation of turbot from the Baltic Sea. These results suggest that populations from the Baltic–Atlantic transition area could be accumulating adaptive polymorphisms in the face of high gene flow

Description

Bibliographic citation

Vilas R, Bouza C, Vera M, Millán A, Martínez P (2010) Variation in anonymous and EST-microsatellites suggests adaptive population divergence in turbot. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 420:231-239. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps08874

Relation

Has part

Has version

Is based on

Is part of

Is referenced by

Is version of

Requires

Sponsors

This work was funded by the grant PGIDIT06PXIB261178PR from Xunta de Galicia, a Consolider Ingenio Aquagenomics project (CSD2007-00002) from Spanish Ministry of Education and Science, and an Isidro Parga Pondal Fellowship to R.V.

Rights

Copyright © 2010 Inter-Research