THE EVOLUTIONARY GENETIC STATUS OF ICELANDIC EELS

The Iceland population of Anguilla eels contains an elevated frequency of fish with vertebral numbers lower than those typical of European localities. Several distinct hypotheses have been advanced to account for these morphologically atypical fish: for example, they could represent (1) genetically...

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Main Authors: Avise, John C, Nelson, William S, Arnold, Jonathan, Koehn, Richard K, Williams, George C, Thorsteinsson, Vilhjálmur
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3fc8z33r
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt3fc8z33r 2023-10-25T01:39:43+02:00 THE EVOLUTIONARY GENETIC STATUS OF ICELANDIC EELS Avise, John C Nelson, William S Arnold, Jonathan Koehn, Richard K Williams, George C Thorsteinsson, Vilhjálmur 1254 - 1262 1990-08-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3fc8z33r unknown eScholarship, University of California qt3fc8z33r https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3fc8z33r CC-BY Evolution, vol 44, iss 5 Biological Sciences Ecology Evolutionary Biology Genetics article 1990 ftcdlib 2023-09-25T18:03:46Z The Iceland population of Anguilla eels contains an elevated frequency of fish with vertebral numbers lower than those typical of European localities. Several distinct hypotheses have been advanced to account for these morphologically atypical fish: for example, they could represent (1) genetically "pure" American expatriates, (2) genetically "pure" European types with ontogenetic abnormalities, or (3) hybrids between American and European forms. Here we critically test these and other possibilities by examining the joint distributions of allozyme markers, mitochondrial DNA markers, and vertebral numbers in Icelandic eels. The particular patterns of association among the genetic and morphological traits demonstrate that the Iceland population includes, in low frequency, the products of hybridization between American and European eels. Approximately 2-4% of the gene pool in the Iceland eel population is derived from American eel ancestry. This hybrid zone is highly unusual in the biological world, because the mating events in catadromous eels presumably take place thousands of kilometers from where the hybrids are observed as maturing juveniles. The molecular data, in conjunction with the geographic distributions, strongly suggest that the differences in migrational behavior and morphology between American and European eels include an important additive genetic component. Evolutionary hypotheses are advanced to account for the original separation of North Atlantic eels into American and European populations, and for the presence of hybrids in Iceland. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland North Atlantic University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Biological Sciences
Ecology
Evolutionary Biology
Genetics
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Ecology
Evolutionary Biology
Genetics
Avise, John C
Nelson, William S
Arnold, Jonathan
Koehn, Richard K
Williams, George C
Thorsteinsson, Vilhjálmur
THE EVOLUTIONARY GENETIC STATUS OF ICELANDIC EELS
topic_facet Biological Sciences
Ecology
Evolutionary Biology
Genetics
description The Iceland population of Anguilla eels contains an elevated frequency of fish with vertebral numbers lower than those typical of European localities. Several distinct hypotheses have been advanced to account for these morphologically atypical fish: for example, they could represent (1) genetically "pure" American expatriates, (2) genetically "pure" European types with ontogenetic abnormalities, or (3) hybrids between American and European forms. Here we critically test these and other possibilities by examining the joint distributions of allozyme markers, mitochondrial DNA markers, and vertebral numbers in Icelandic eels. The particular patterns of association among the genetic and morphological traits demonstrate that the Iceland population includes, in low frequency, the products of hybridization between American and European eels. Approximately 2-4% of the gene pool in the Iceland eel population is derived from American eel ancestry. This hybrid zone is highly unusual in the biological world, because the mating events in catadromous eels presumably take place thousands of kilometers from where the hybrids are observed as maturing juveniles. The molecular data, in conjunction with the geographic distributions, strongly suggest that the differences in migrational behavior and morphology between American and European eels include an important additive genetic component. Evolutionary hypotheses are advanced to account for the original separation of North Atlantic eels into American and European populations, and for the presence of hybrids in Iceland.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Avise, John C
Nelson, William S
Arnold, Jonathan
Koehn, Richard K
Williams, George C
Thorsteinsson, Vilhjálmur
author_facet Avise, John C
Nelson, William S
Arnold, Jonathan
Koehn, Richard K
Williams, George C
Thorsteinsson, Vilhjálmur
author_sort Avise, John C
title THE EVOLUTIONARY GENETIC STATUS OF ICELANDIC EELS
title_short THE EVOLUTIONARY GENETIC STATUS OF ICELANDIC EELS
title_full THE EVOLUTIONARY GENETIC STATUS OF ICELANDIC EELS
title_fullStr THE EVOLUTIONARY GENETIC STATUS OF ICELANDIC EELS
title_full_unstemmed THE EVOLUTIONARY GENETIC STATUS OF ICELANDIC EELS
title_sort evolutionary genetic status of icelandic eels
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 1990
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3fc8z33r
op_coverage 1254 - 1262
genre Iceland
North Atlantic
genre_facet Iceland
North Atlantic
op_source Evolution, vol 44, iss 5
op_relation qt3fc8z33r
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3fc8z33r
op_rights CC-BY
_version_ 1780735167909855232