Integrating microsatellite DNA markers and otolith geochemistry to assess population structure of European hake (Merluccius merluccius)
Integrating microsatellite DNA markers and otolith geochemistry to assess population structure of European hake (Merluccius merluccius)
Date
2014-03
Authors
Tanner, Susanne E.
Perez, Montse
Presa, Pablo
Thorrold, Simon R.
Cabral, Henrique N.
Perez, Montse
Presa, Pablo
Thorrold, Simon R.
Cabral, Henrique N.
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Keywords
Movement
Population structure
Otolith geochemistry
Microsatellites
European hake
Population structure
Otolith geochemistry
Microsatellites
European hake
Abstract
Population structure and natal origins of European hake were investigated using
microsatellite DNA markers and otolith geochemistry data. Five microsatellites were
sequenced and otolith core geochemical composition was determined from age-1 hake
collected in the northeast Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. Microsatellites
provided evidence of a major genetic split in the vicinity of the Strait of Gibraltar,
separating the Atlantic and the Mediterranean populations, with the exception of the Gulf
of Cádiz. Based on classification models using otolith core geochemical values
individuals’ natal origins were identified, although with an increased error rate. Coupling
genotype and otolith data increased classification accuracy of individuals to their potential
natal origins while providing evidence of movement between the northern and southern
stock units in the Atlantic Ocean. Information obtained by the two natural markers on
population structure of European hake was complementary as the two markers act at
different spatio-temporal scales. Otolith geochemistry provides information over an
ecological time frame and on a fine spatial scale, while microsatellite DNA markers report
on gene flow over evolutionary time scales and therefore act on a broader spatio-temporal
resolution. Thus, this study confirmed the usefulness of otolith geochemistry to
complement the assessment of early life stage dispersal in populations with high gene flow
and low genetic divergence.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2014. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 142 (2014): 68-75, doi:10.1016/j.ecss.2014.03.010.