Historical and contemporary processes shaping population genetic structure in an anadromous fish (Osmerus mordax)

The spatial scale at which populations are genetically structured is of immense interest for the understanding of a species’ ecology and evolutionary biology. This can have important implications for management of resources as well as predicting responses to future change. Rainbow smelt (Osmerus mor...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Coulson, Mark
Other Authors: Department of Biology, Doctor of Philosophy, Dr. Timothy Frasier, Dr. Hal Whitehead, Dr. Daniel Ruzzante, Dr. Rod Bradford, Dr. Paul Bentzen, Not Applicable, Yes
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/49090
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/49090 2023-05-15T17:19:55+02:00 Historical and contemporary processes shaping population genetic structure in an anadromous fish (Osmerus mordax) Coulson, Mark Department of Biology Doctor of Philosophy Dr. Timothy Frasier Dr. Hal Whitehead Dr. Daniel Ruzzante Dr. Rod Bradford Dr. Paul Bentzen Not Applicable Yes 2014-04-04T15:46:01Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/49090 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10222/49090 population genetics rainbow smelt phylogeography population structure mitochondrial microsatellites 2014 ftdalhouse 2021-12-29T18:09:53Z The spatial scale at which populations are genetically structured is of immense interest for the understanding of a species’ ecology and evolutionary biology. This can have important implications for management of resources as well as predicting responses to future change. Rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) is an anadromous species with a relatively short freshwater residence time compared to other species with similar life-history strategies. Therefore, while they offer the opportunity to sample distinct spawning aggregations, they also offer an insight into the relative roles of contemporary and historical factors shaping connectivity among marine populations, an area of great interest, and for which further understanding is required. With the use of both mitochondrial DNA and nuclear microsatellite markers, I explored the historical and contemporary factors influencing population structure in smelt. While previous phylogeographic work on this species has resolved two mtDNA lineages dating back to previous glacial episodes, I document the discovery of a zone of contact between these lineages in Newfoundland. This is in addition to the established contact zone in the St. Lawrence estuary, and results in a longitudinal distribution of the races with one race predominating on opposite ends of the species distribution, while the other race is geographically intermediate. Patterns of nuclear genetic variation largely mirror the phylogeographic signals in Newfoundland and suggest a more recent colonization of the Avalon Peninsula as well as implicating a remnant historical signal of colonization of the west coast of Newfoundland from the mainland. In addition, contrasting patterns of genetic diversity and levels of differentiation were apparent between the mainland and Newfoundland and suggest differing scales of dispersal within this species. While the population structure within Newfoundland is most consistent with dispersal restricted to within bays, larger scale biogeographic regions were identified in the mainland range, suggesting dispersal is more common and widespread. In addition, sampling of different run times (i.e. ‘early’ vs. ‘late’) demonstrated the potential for isolation by time when spawning events are separated by a break in activity. Overall, these results shed light into the possible roles of both historical and contemporary factors shaping the dynamics and connectivity among populations. Other/Unknown Material Newfoundland Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language English
topic population genetics
rainbow smelt
phylogeography
population structure
mitochondrial
microsatellites
spellingShingle population genetics
rainbow smelt
phylogeography
population structure
mitochondrial
microsatellites
Coulson, Mark
Historical and contemporary processes shaping population genetic structure in an anadromous fish (Osmerus mordax)
topic_facet population genetics
rainbow smelt
phylogeography
population structure
mitochondrial
microsatellites
description The spatial scale at which populations are genetically structured is of immense interest for the understanding of a species’ ecology and evolutionary biology. This can have important implications for management of resources as well as predicting responses to future change. Rainbow smelt (Osmerus mordax) is an anadromous species with a relatively short freshwater residence time compared to other species with similar life-history strategies. Therefore, while they offer the opportunity to sample distinct spawning aggregations, they also offer an insight into the relative roles of contemporary and historical factors shaping connectivity among marine populations, an area of great interest, and for which further understanding is required. With the use of both mitochondrial DNA and nuclear microsatellite markers, I explored the historical and contemporary factors influencing population structure in smelt. While previous phylogeographic work on this species has resolved two mtDNA lineages dating back to previous glacial episodes, I document the discovery of a zone of contact between these lineages in Newfoundland. This is in addition to the established contact zone in the St. Lawrence estuary, and results in a longitudinal distribution of the races with one race predominating on opposite ends of the species distribution, while the other race is geographically intermediate. Patterns of nuclear genetic variation largely mirror the phylogeographic signals in Newfoundland and suggest a more recent colonization of the Avalon Peninsula as well as implicating a remnant historical signal of colonization of the west coast of Newfoundland from the mainland. In addition, contrasting patterns of genetic diversity and levels of differentiation were apparent between the mainland and Newfoundland and suggest differing scales of dispersal within this species. While the population structure within Newfoundland is most consistent with dispersal restricted to within bays, larger scale biogeographic regions were identified in the mainland range, suggesting dispersal is more common and widespread. In addition, sampling of different run times (i.e. ‘early’ vs. ‘late’) demonstrated the potential for isolation by time when spawning events are separated by a break in activity. Overall, these results shed light into the possible roles of both historical and contemporary factors shaping the dynamics and connectivity among populations.
author2 Department of Biology
Doctor of Philosophy
Dr. Timothy Frasier
Dr. Hal Whitehead
Dr. Daniel Ruzzante
Dr. Rod Bradford
Dr. Paul Bentzen
Not Applicable
Yes
author Coulson, Mark
author_facet Coulson, Mark
author_sort Coulson, Mark
title Historical and contemporary processes shaping population genetic structure in an anadromous fish (Osmerus mordax)
title_short Historical and contemporary processes shaping population genetic structure in an anadromous fish (Osmerus mordax)
title_full Historical and contemporary processes shaping population genetic structure in an anadromous fish (Osmerus mordax)
title_fullStr Historical and contemporary processes shaping population genetic structure in an anadromous fish (Osmerus mordax)
title_full_unstemmed Historical and contemporary processes shaping population genetic structure in an anadromous fish (Osmerus mordax)
title_sort historical and contemporary processes shaping population genetic structure in an anadromous fish (osmerus mordax)
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/49090
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10222/49090
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