Occurrence of sympatric charr groups, Salvelinus , Salmonidae, in the lakes of Kamchatka: a legacy of the last glaciations

Six postglacial lakes were studied along both sides of the Kamchatka central mountain range, Russia. Pairs of local morphotypes of species of Arctic charrs, Salvelinus spp., have previously been described from the southernmost lakes while the fish fauna of the four northernmost lakes was studied her...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Fish Biology
Main Authors: Esin, E. V., Bocharova, E. S., Mugue, N. S., Markevich, G. N.
Other Authors: Russian Federal Research Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography (VNIRO)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jfb.13378
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1111%2Fjfb.13378
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/jfb.13378
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Summary:Six postglacial lakes were studied along both sides of the Kamchatka central mountain range, Russia. Pairs of local morphotypes of species of Arctic charrs, Salvelinus spp., have previously been described from the southernmost lakes while the fish fauna of the four northernmost lakes was studied here for the first time. Phenotypic data support the division of Kamchatkan lacustrine charrs into two groups according to the number of gill rakers and pyloric caeca, as well as snout–dorsal and snout–ventral distances (MANOVA, P < 0·001). These groups respectively correspond to phenotypes commonly referred to as Salvelinus malma and Salvelinus taranetzi . To clarify the identity of these groups, D‐loop and cytochrome b ( cytb ) region sequences were analysed. Haplotype network analysis of mtDNA shows the salmonids inhabiting four lakes on the south and north are phylogenetically close to either Beringian S. malma or to S. taranetzi from the Chukotka and Kolyma River basins (the mean ± s.e. pairwise per cent sequence divergence is 0·006 ± 0·001). Phenotype–genotype discordance suggests that mitochondrial introgression between species has occurred in the two smallest lakes (<0·5 km 2 ) in the central part of the peninsula. Identical haplotypes of D‐loop and cytb regions were found for the populations of S. taranetzi from the most distant southern and northern lakes, indicating all lakes were colonized by both species simultaneously after the last glacial maximum. Salvelinus taranetzi may have colonized the Kamchatka peninsula from one or both of two different source regions: the Arctic Beringia and the northern coast of the Okhotsk Sea.