Artigo Revisado por pares

Divergence of brown trout ( Salmo trutta ) within glacial refugia

2000; Canadian Science Publishing; Volume: 57; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1139/f00-199

ISSN

1205-7533

Autores

Núria Sanz, José‐Luis García‐Marín, Carles Plá,

Tópico(s)

Fish Ecology and Management Studies

Resumo

The Pleistocene glaciations produced a range of changes that affected the genetic population structure of fish species. Usually, studies focused on the population structure of species in postglacial recolonized areas and less attention was devoted to species differentiation within refuge areas. Allelic frequencies for 21 polymorphic protein-coding loci were compared among 25 collections within a northwestern Iberian glacial refuge of brown trout (Salmo trutta) using adjusted frequencies for nine populations to account for introgressions with exogenous hatchery fish. The high divergence observed (F ST = 0.645) and geographical patterns of allelic variation are interpreted to reflect the existence of strong population structuring among native populations of this refuge. Four major geographic groups were defined within the region: (i) in the Tajo River, (ii) in the Duero River, (iii) in the Sil River, and (iv) among Cantabrian Sea flowing rivers including present anadromous populations. These gene pools have diverged genetically and ecologically in response to climatic oscillations. Anthropogenic effects on habitat and fish populations seriously compromise their future.

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