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Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences

Publication date: 2008-11-01
Volume: 65 Pages: 2412 - 2426
Publisher: National Research Council Canada

Author:

Elmer, KR
Van Houdt, Jeroen ; Meyer, A ; Volckaert, Filip

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Fisheries, Marine & Freshwater Biology, TROUT SALVELINUS-NAMAYCUSH, MITOCHONDRIAL-DNA, PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS, POSTGLACIAL DISPERSAL, COMPUTER-PROGRAM, GLACIAL RACES, PHYLOGEOGRAPHY, COREGONUS, THYMALLUS, INFERENCE, 0602 Ecology, 0608 Zoology, 0704 Fisheries Sciences, 3005 Fisheries sciences, 3103 Ecology

Abstract:

The burbot, Lota lota (Teleostei: Gadidae), has a holarctic distribution, with one subspecies (Lota lota lota) living in the lakes and rivers of the Palaearctic and northwestern North America and the other (Lota lota maculosa) living in the Nearctic (except the northwest). We analysed nine microsatellite loci and the mitochondrial DNA control region of 350 burbot sampled across North America to develop a continent-wide understanding of population differentiation following postglacial recolonization. Using mitochondrial DNA, we identify three subclades of L. l. maculosa: one is widespread, one is moderately well distributed, and the third is restricted to the southwest. Lota l. lota is restricted to Yukon and Alaska. Microsatellite loci show moderate levels of genetic diversity and high population differentiation throughout North America (Rst ≤ 0.9). Lota l. maculosa and L. l. lota mtDNA lineages only co-occur appreciably in Great Slave Lake. An individual-based Bayesian approach to detect genotypic admixture indicates that very few of all individuals show signs of admixture between subspecies, and those individuals are restricted to Great Slave Lake and Lake Laberge. © 2008 NRC.