Data from: Genetic evidence for the uncoupling of local aquaculture activities and a population of an invasive species – a case study of Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas)

Human-mediated introduction of non-native species into coastal areas via aquaculture is one of the main pathways that can lead to biological invasions. To develop strategies to counteract invasions it is critical to determine whether populations establishing in the wild are self-sustaining or based...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kochmann, Judith, Carlsson, Jens, Crowe, Tasman P., Mariani, Stefano
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.4g96s
Description
Summary:Human-mediated introduction of non-native species into coastal areas via aquaculture is one of the main pathways that can lead to biological invasions. To develop strategies to counteract invasions it is critical to determine whether populations establishing in the wild are self-sustaining or based on repeated introductions. Invasions by the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) have been associated with the growing oyster aquaculture industry worldwide. In this study, temporal genetic variability of farmed and wild oysters from the largest enclosed bay in Ireland was assessed to reconstruct the recent biological history of the feral populations using seven anonymous and seven microsatellites linked to expressed sequence tags (ESTs). There was no evidence of EST-linked markers showing footprints of selection. Allelic richness was higher in feral than in aquaculture samples (p=0.003, paired t-test). Significant deviations from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (HWE) due to heterozygote deficiencies were detected for almost all loci and samples, most likely explained by the presence of null-alleles. Relatively high genetic differentiation was found between aquaculture and feral oysters (largest pairwise multilocus FST 0.074, p < 0.01) and between year classes of oysters from aquaculture (largest pairwise multilocus FST 0.073, p < 0.01), which was also confirmed by the strong separation of aquaculture and wild samples using Bayesian clustering approaches. A ten-fold higher effective population size (Ne) – and a high number of private alleles – in wild oysters suggest an established self-sustaining feral population. The wild oyster population studied appears demographically independent from the current aquaculture activities in the estuary and alternative scenarios of introduction pathways are discussed. 14lociDRYADThe datafile is in GENEPOP format. It comprises genotype scores for 14 Crassostrea gigas-specific microsatellite loci. Locus names are listed at the beginning of the file under the title line, the first 7 ...