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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Phylogeography of Diplodus sargus from the northeastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean was assessed using sequences from
the mitochondrial control region and the first intron of the S7 ribosomal protein gene. The relationship between genetic and
geographic distances supported an isolation by distance model, with the Azores having a peripheral position. The geographic
distribution of the genetic diversity, together with the historical demography of the populations studied can be explained by the
effect of the Pleistocene glaciations in the northeastern Atlantic warm water fauna. D. sargus might have disappeared from western
Europe during glacial peaks and suffered considerable demographic reductions in the Canaries and Mauritania, surviving in less
affected areas such as Madeira, Azores and the Mediterranean. The mismatch analysis and the Fu's Fs values provide clear
evidence of expansion in western Iberia (S. Pedro), Canaries, Mauritania and also in the eastern Mediterranean. Atlantic and
Mediterranean populations of D. sargus showed no signs of genetic differentiation. D. sargus are active swimmers that can
undergo extensive movements along the shores. This and the presence of planktonic eggs and larvae would allow rapid mixing
between Mediterranean and Atlantic fish, erasing signs of population differentiation.
Description
Keywords
Diplodus sargus Isolation by distance Northeastern Atlantic Mediterranean Pleistocene glaciations
Citation
Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 346, 102-113