Data from: Polar lakes may act as ecological islands to aquatic protists ...

A fundamental question in ecology is whether microorganisms follow the same patterns as multicellular organisms when it comes to population structure and levels of genetic diversity. Enormous population sizes, predominately asexual reproduction, and presumably high dispersal due to small body size c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rengefors, Karin, Logares, Ramiro, Laybourn-Parry, Johanna
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.87js01tv
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.87js01tv
Description
Summary:A fundamental question in ecology is whether microorganisms follow the same patterns as multicellular organisms when it comes to population structure and levels of genetic diversity. Enormous population sizes, predominately asexual reproduction, and presumably high dispersal due to small body size could have profound implications on their genetic diversity and population structure. Here, we have analyzed the population genetic structure in a lake-dwelling microbial eukaryote (dinoflagellate) and tested the hypothesis that there is population genetic differentiation among nearby lake subpopulations. This dinoflagellate occurs in the marine-derived saline lakes of the Vestfold Hills, Antarctica, which are ice-covered most of the year. Clonal strains were isolated from four different lakes, and were genotyped using AFLP (Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism). Our results show high genetic differentiation among lake populations despite their close geographical proximity (< 9 km). Moreover, genotype ... : S_hangoei_AFLP_scoresDocumentation to S_hangoei_AFLP_scores This text file contains the scored AFLP data for Fst calculations and Structure runs. A total of 379 loci are included, 106 strains from four different populations. The first row (except column 1 and 2) contain the names of the loci (Loc_01 to Loc_379). The first column (as of row 2) contains the strain designation consisting of 4 letter and 2-3 numbers. SH represents species designation, i.e. Scrippsiella aft. hangoei (Dinophyceae), the next two letters indicate the lake from which the strain originates (AB=Abraxas, HI = Highway, MC = McNeil, VE = Vereteno; all lakes located in the Vestfold Hills, Antarctica), the last 2-3 digits represent the strain number. The third column (as of row 2) indicates lake population from which the strain originates. ABRA = Lake Abraxas, HIGH = Highway Lake, MCNEIL = McNeil Lake, VERE = Lake Vereteno. All subsequent columns give scores for presence of AFLP peaks. 1 = presence, 2 = absence of peak. There are no missing ...