First Molecular Record of the Pacific Oyster (Crassostrea gigas, Thunberg 1793) in the Marmara Sea, Turkey

The Pacific oyster (Crassostreagigas) has a very important economic potential for aquaculture, but on theother hand, is among the highly invasive species in the world and within theMediterranean ecosystem. In the 1960s, C. gigas was brought to Europefor aquaculture in the Mediterranean and Black Sea...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Science and Technology Bulletin
Main Authors: ÖZCAN GÖKÇEK, Emel, ACARLI, Sefa, KARAHAN, Bilge, VURAL, Pervin, KOBAN BAŞTANLAR, Evren
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Adem Yavuz SÖNMEZ 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/masteb/issue/50769/668529
https://doi.org/10.33714/masteb.668529
Description
Summary:The Pacific oyster (Crassostreagigas) has a very important economic potential for aquaculture, but on theother hand, is among the highly invasive species in the world and within theMediterranean ecosystem. In the 1960s, C. gigas was brought to Europefor aquaculture in the Mediterranean and Black Sea regions from Japan andCanada. The Turkish waters are the part of the Mediterranean Sea, which is theworld’s most invaded sea. The invasion of alien species results from marinetransportation and aquaculture activities of non-native species. A heavymaritime traffic is also present in the Marmara Sea, which connects the BlackSea and Mediterranean Sea. The identification of the invasive species and theirdistributions is very prominent in terms of protecting natural habitat andmonitoring the effects of invasive species. In this study, 30 individuals,morphologically identified as C. gigas, were collected from Bandırmabay. The genomic DNAs were extracted from each sample’s muscle tissue usinguniversal salt extraction method. Partial sequences of COI and 16SMitochondrial DNA loci of the sample DNAs were obtained for speciesidentification. The sequences were searched against the database and resultswere retrieved from BLAST. All the sequences obtained in this study showedsignificant similarity with the C. gigas sequences present in thedatabase (E=0). The sample sequences resulted in 9 different haplotypes for theCOI locus (hd: 0.5296 and variance: 0.01256±0.112) and 5 different haplotypesfor the 16S rDNA locus (hd: 0.2529, Variance: 0.01076±0.104). The results ofthis study provided the first molecular evidence for the presence of non-nativePacific oyster individuals in the Marmara Sea.