Author:
Bryars Simon R.,Adams Mark
Abstract
Allozyme analysis was used to examine the species-level systematics and stock
structure of the Australian blue swimmer crab
Portunus pelagicus. Fifty-seven crabs from eight sites
were screened in an overview study for allozyme variation at 35 loci. This
overview study revealed the presence of two species, differing at a Nei
D of 0.14 (2% fixed differences), in the Darwin
region of northern Australia. One of these species corresponds to the common
P. pelagicus found throughout Australia, whereas the
other is most likely either an undescribed ‘cryptic’ species, or
the east-Asian species P. trituberculatus. In total, 609
P. pelagicus from 11 sites covering three regions in
South Australia and two regions in the Northern Territory were then genotyped
at seven polymorphic loci and these data assessed, using goodness- of-fit and
F-statistics, for the existence of subpopulations. Four
discrete subpopulations could be discerned, namely West Coast, Spencer Gulf,
and Gulf St Vincent in South Australia, and Darwin–Gove in the Northern
Territory. No evidence of population substructuring among sites within each
subpopulation was evident from the allozyme data. The results support the
current recognition of the three South Australian regions as separate stocks,
and suggest that a taxonomic revision of Indo-Pacific
Portunus is warranted.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography