Limited gene flow in Uca minax (LeConte 1855) along a tidally influenced river system

Author:

Staton Joseph1,Borgianini Stephen1,Gibson Ian,Brodie Renae2,Greig Thomas3

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Natural Sciences, University of South Carolina, Bluffton, SC, 29909, USA

2. 3Biological Sciences, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, MA, 01075, USA

3. 4NOAA/National Ocean Service Center for Coastal Environmental Health & Biomolecular Research, Charleston, SC, 29412, USA

Abstract

AbstractFor crab larvae, swimming behaviors coupled with the movement of tides suggests that larvae can normally move upstream within estuaries by avoiding ebb tides and actively swimming during flood tides (i.e., flood-tide transport [FTT]). Recently, a 1-D transport model incorporating larval behavior predicted that opposing forces of river discharge and tidal amplitude in the Pee Dee River/Winyah Bay system of South Carolina, USA, could limit dispersal within a single estuary for downstream transport as well as become a dispersal barrier to recruitment of late stage larvae to the freshwater adult habitats of Uca minax (LeConte 1855). We sequenced 394-bp of the mitochondrial cytochrome apoenzyme b for 226 adult U. minax, from four locales along a 49-km stretch of the Pee Dee River/Winyah Bay estuary, above and below the boundary of salt intrusion. Results of an analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) and an exact test of population differentiation showed a small, but statistically significant (α=0.05) population subdivision among adults of the 4 subpopulations, as well as all subpopulations being significantly differentiated (α=0.05). This pattern fitted with model predictions, which implies that larval transport within the tidally influenced river system is limited.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Neuroscience

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