Abstract The Atlantic surfclam, Spisula solidissima

and Cape Hatteras harvests offshore populations of one subspecies, S. s. solidissima. A smaller coastal form, S. s. similis Say (also known as S. s. raveneli Conrad), has a partially sympatric geographic distribution, but differs in several life-history characteristics. DNA sequence variation in mit...

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http://www2.dnr.cornell.edu/HareLab/pdf/2005b.pdf
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spelling ftciteseerx:oai:CiteSeerX.psu:10.1.1.463.9299 2023-05-15T17:34:53+02:00 Abstract The Atlantic surfclam, Spisula solidissima The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives application/pdf http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.463.9299 http://www2.dnr.cornell.edu/HareLab/pdf/2005b.pdf en eng http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.463.9299 http://www2.dnr.cornell.edu/HareLab/pdf/2005b.pdf Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it. http://www2.dnr.cornell.edu/HareLab/pdf/2005b.pdf text ftciteseerx 2016-01-08T06:47:30Z and Cape Hatteras harvests offshore populations of one subspecies, S. s. solidissima. A smaller coastal form, S. s. similis Say (also known as S. s. raveneli Conrad), has a partially sympatric geographic distribution, but differs in several life-history characteristics. DNA sequence variation in mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) and in introns at two nuclear calmodulin loci was examined to measure genetic divergence between the two subspecies and to test for population structure among populations of S. s. solidissima. Surfclams were collected from seven localities between 1994 and 2001. Based on both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA variation, the two subspecies of S. solidissima are reciprocally monophy-letic, with a net COI divergence of 13.9%, indicating long-term reproductive isolation. The only significant differentiation among populations of S. s. solidissima (based on an AMOVA analysis of COI sequences) was between the Gulf of St. Lawrence and more southerly populations. A long internal branch in the S. s. soli-dissima genealogy coupled with low haplotype diversity in the northern-most population suggests that popula-tions north and south of Nova Scotia have been isolated from each other in the past, with gene exchange more recently. Populations of S. s. similis from Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coasts had a net COI divergence of 9.2%. Thus, diversification of Spisula spp. clams in the western North Atlantic involved an early adaptive divergence between coastal and offshore forms, with later barriers to dispersal emerging in the offshore form from north to south and in the coastal form between Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico populations. Text North Atlantic Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftciteseerx
language English
description and Cape Hatteras harvests offshore populations of one subspecies, S. s. solidissima. A smaller coastal form, S. s. similis Say (also known as S. s. raveneli Conrad), has a partially sympatric geographic distribution, but differs in several life-history characteristics. DNA sequence variation in mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) and in introns at two nuclear calmodulin loci was examined to measure genetic divergence between the two subspecies and to test for population structure among populations of S. s. solidissima. Surfclams were collected from seven localities between 1994 and 2001. Based on both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA variation, the two subspecies of S. solidissima are reciprocally monophy-letic, with a net COI divergence of 13.9%, indicating long-term reproductive isolation. The only significant differentiation among populations of S. s. solidissima (based on an AMOVA analysis of COI sequences) was between the Gulf of St. Lawrence and more southerly populations. A long internal branch in the S. s. soli-dissima genealogy coupled with low haplotype diversity in the northern-most population suggests that popula-tions north and south of Nova Scotia have been isolated from each other in the past, with gene exchange more recently. Populations of S. s. similis from Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coasts had a net COI divergence of 9.2%. Thus, diversification of Spisula spp. clams in the western North Atlantic involved an early adaptive divergence between coastal and offshore forms, with later barriers to dispersal emerging in the offshore form from north to south and in the coastal form between Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico populations.
author2 The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
format Text
title Abstract The Atlantic surfclam, Spisula solidissima
spellingShingle Abstract The Atlantic surfclam, Spisula solidissima
title_short Abstract The Atlantic surfclam, Spisula solidissima
title_full Abstract The Atlantic surfclam, Spisula solidissima
title_fullStr Abstract The Atlantic surfclam, Spisula solidissima
title_full_unstemmed Abstract The Atlantic surfclam, Spisula solidissima
title_sort abstract the atlantic surfclam, spisula solidissima
url http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.463.9299
http://www2.dnr.cornell.edu/HareLab/pdf/2005b.pdf
genre North Atlantic
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op_source http://www2.dnr.cornell.edu/HareLab/pdf/2005b.pdf
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http://www2.dnr.cornell.edu/HareLab/pdf/2005b.pdf
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