Connectivity among populations of pygmy whitefish (Prosopium coulterii) in northwestern North America inferred from microsatellite DNA analyses

Author:

Taylor E.B.1,Gow J.L.1,Witt J.12,Zemlak R.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology and Native Fishes Research Group, University of British Columbia, 6270 University Boulevard, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.

2. Department of Biology, University of Waterloo, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.

3. Peace/Williston Fish and Wildlife Compensation Program, 1011 4th Avenue, Prince George, BC V2L 3H9, Canada.

Abstract

We studied microsatellite DNA variation in 15 populations of northwestern North American pygmy whitefish ( Prosopium coulterii (Eigenmann and Eigenmann, 1892)), an enigmatic freshwater fish thought to be highly fragmented by residency in deep, cold postglacial lakes. Population subdivision (θ) across 10 loci was 0.12 (P < 0.001) across samples, but one western Alaskan population was more divergent than all others (θ = 0.31–0.41, P < 0.001). Within the Williston Reservoir watershed (WRW), θ averaged 0.08 (P < 0.001) and was positively associated with both the geographic distance between localities (r2= 0.36, P < 0.001) and the number of branch points interconnecting them (r2= 0.33, P < 0.001). Differentiation among populations was modeled as the sum of the genetic distances for the stream sections interconnecting them (r2= 0.74). Differences among subwatersheds with the WRW accounted for 5.1% of the total variation in allele frequencies (P < 0.001). Assignment tests suggested limited movement among lakes, with most inferred dispersal between adjacent watersheds. Coalescent analysis strongly supported a gene flow–drift equilibrium model of population structure over a drift-only model. Effective management of diversity in pygmy whitefish requires the maintenance of stream networks that interconnect lakes within a watershed.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference62 articles.

1. Allendorf, F.W., and Luikart, G. 2007. Conservation genetics of populations. Blackwell Publishing Inc., Malden, Mass.

2. Allendorf, F.W., and Waples, R.S. 1996. Conservation and genetics of salmonid fishes.InConservation genetics: case histories from nature.Edited byJ.C. Avise and J.L. Hamrick. Chapman Hall, New York. pp. 238–280.

3. Becker, G.C. 1983. Fishes of Wisconsin. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.

4. Belkhir, K., Borsa, P., Chikhi, N., Raufaste, N., and Bonhomme, F. 2001. GENETIX 4.02, logiciel sous Windows™ pour la genetique des populations. Laboratoire Genome, Populations, Interactions, CNRS UMR 5000, Universite de Montpellier II, Montpellier, France.

5. Phylogeographic Structure in Mitochondrial DNA of the Lake Whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) and Its Relation to Pleistocene Glaciations

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