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Population genetics of the blue crabCallinectes sapidus: modest population structuring in a background of high gene flow
Authors:Anne L McMillen-Jackson  Theresa M Bert  Philip Steele
Institution:(1) Florida Marine Research Institute, 100 Eighth Avenue Southeast, 33701 St. Petersburg, Florida, USA
Abstract:To determine the genetic population structure of blue crabs (Callinectes sapidus Rathbun), electrophoretic allozyme analysis was performed on 750 individuals collected from 16 nearshore locations ranging from New York to Texas, USA. Twenty enzymes and non-enzymatic proteins coded by 31 presumptive loci were examined. Twenty-two loci were either monomorphic or polymorphic at less than theP 95 level; alleles for these polymorphic loci were geographically dispersed. Allele frequencies for three of the remaining polymorphic loci were homogeneous over all populations, as were levels of polymorphism and heterozygosity. Phenograms generated by the UPGMA (unweighted pair-group method using arithmetic averages) and distance Wagner methods exhibited no geographic pattern in the clustering of populations. Estimates ofN em (effective number of migrants per generation between populations) indicated substantial gene flow, with aalues sufficiently high to infer panmixia between all blue crab populations from New York to Texas. However, despite this high level of gene flow, two striking patterns of geographic differentiation occurred: genetic patchiness and clinal variation. Allele frequencies atEST-2, GP-1, IDHP-2, DPEP-1, DPEP-2, andTPEP exhibited genetic patchiness on local and range-wide geographic scales, and allele frequencies atEST-2 varied temporally. Genetic patchiness in blue crabs is likely to be the result of the pre-settlement formation and subsequent settlement of genetically heterogeneous patches of larvae; allele frequencies of those larval patches may then be further modified through ontogeny by localized selection. In the Atlantic Ocean, a regional latitudinal cline ofEST-2 allele frequencies was superimposed on the range-wide genetic patchiness exhibited by that locus. This pattern against a background of high gene flow is highly likely to be maintained by selection. In estuaries along the Atlantic Ocean coast, a combination of low adult long-distance migration and a high retention rate of locally spawned larvae could serve to segregate populations and allow for the development of the geographic cline inEST-2. The Gulf of Mexico showed no apparent cline, perhaps due to long-distance migration of females in some regions of the Gulf, or to masking by genetic patchiness. These results emphasize the importance of both ecological and evolutionary time scales and structuring mechanisms in determining genetic population structure.
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