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Global phylogeography of the dolphinfish (Coryphaena hippurus): the influence of large effective population size and recent dispersal on the divergence of a marine pelagic cosmopolitan species
Authors:Díaz-Jaimes P  Uribe-Alcocer M  Rocha-Olivares A  García-de-León F J  Nortmoon P  Durand J D
Affiliation:a Laboratorio de Genética de Organismos Acuáticos, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México-Apdo. Postal 70-305, México D.F. 04510, Mexico;b Departamento de Oceanografía Biológica, Centro de Investigación Científica y de Educación Superior de Ensenada, km 107 Carretera Tijuana-Ensenada, 22860 Baja California, Mexico;c Laboratorio de Genética para la Conservación, Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste, Mar Bermejo No. 195, La Paz, BCS 23090, Mexico;d Andaman Sea Fisheries Research and Development Center, 77 Tumbon Vichit, Maung District, Phuket 83000, Thailand;e Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, UMR 5119 route des hydrocarbures, BP 1386 CP 1854 Bel Air, Dakar, Senegal
Abstract:Pelagic fish that are distributed circumtropically are characterised by a low population structure level as a result of a high capacity for dispersion and large population sizes. Nevertheless, historical and contemporary processes, including past demographic and/or range expansions, secondary contact, dispersal, gene flow, and the achievement of large effective population sizes, may play a part in the detection of divergence signals, especially in the case of tropical pelagic species, whose distribution range depends strongly on the sea surface temperature. The connectivity and historical demography of Atlantic, Indian, Pacific and Mediterranean populations of dolphinfish (Coryphaena hippurus) was studied using partial sequences of the mitochondrial DNA NADH dehydrogenase subunit 1 (ND1). AMOVA analyses revealed significant inter-oceanic divergence with three phylogroups located in the Indo-Pacific, Eastern Atlantic, and Mediterranean Sea, the last one being the most divergent. However, it was not possible to clearly observe any genetic differentiation between the Indo-Pacific and Atlantic populations, as has been reported for most tropical pelagic species of tuna and billfishes. This supports the assumption of recent dispersal among basins facilitated by the actual continuous distribution of dolphinfish populations. Moreover, the lack of a divergence signal for populations separated by the Panamanian Isthmus reveals that genetic drift does not exert a strong influence on tropical pelagic species with large effective population sizes.
Keywords:Dolphinfish   Phylogeography   Population structure   Dispersal   Vicariance
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