Genetic population structure of Japanese bagrid catfishes

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Silurus
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Genetic population structure of Japanese bagrid catfishes

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Watanabe, K & M Nishida, 2003. Genetic population structure of Japanese bagrid catfishes. Ichthyological Research 50: 140-148.

The genetic population structures of four bagrid catfishes, allopatrically distributed in Japan, were investigated based on nucleotide sequence data from the mitochondrial control region (ca. 420 bp) of 296 specimens from 29 river systems. Almost no sequence variations were found within riverine populations of each species, especially <i>Pseudobagrus ichikawai</i>, in which no individual variations were found in any specimens from eight river systems throughout its range. In contrast, the <i>P. nudiceps</i> population in the Lake Biwa-Yodo River system showed relatively high polymorphism. These results imply that the riverine populations have undergone a bottleneck situation at some time. Most of the riverine populations of <i>P. nudiceps</i> and <i>P. ichikawai</i>, which are mainly distributed in areas around an inland sea or bay, were fixed into a single haplotype for each species. On the other hand, in <i>P. tokiensis</i> and <i>P. aurantiacus</i>, which are distributed in areas surrounding extensive mountainous regions, the haplotype compositions clearly differed among conspecific populations. These results suggest that some degree of gene flow existed among populations of each of the former two species during glacial regression periods. Based on the genetic variability of <i>P. fulvidraco</i>, widely distributed in continental East Asia, and the degree of genetic divergence between <i>P. aurantiacus</i> and its possible sister species, <i>P. taeniatus</i>, in China, the evolutionary rate of East Asian bagrids appears to be relatively low, estimated at a few percent per million years or less.
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Post by Jools »

HH,

What's a haplotype?

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Post by Silurus »

To put it simply, haplotypes are just DNA sequence variants. The mitochondrial genome of a population usually consists of several different haplotypes.
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