Authors
Ilaria Milano, Massimiliano Babbucci, Alessia Cariani, Miroslava Atanassova, Dorte Bekkevold, Gary R Carvalho, Montserrat Espiñeira, Fabio Fiorentino, Germana Garofalo, Audrey J Geffen, Jakob H Hansen, Sarah J Helyar, Einar E Nielsen, Rob Ogden, Tomaso Patarnello, Marco Stagioni, FishPopTrace Consortium, Fausto Tinti, Luca Bargelloni
Publication date
2014/1
Journal
Molecular ecology
Volume
23
Issue
1
Pages
118-135
Description
Shallow population structure is generally reported for most marine fish and explained as a consequence of high dispersal, connectivity and large population size. Targeted gene analyses and more recently genome‐wide studies have challenged such view, suggesting that adaptive divergence might occur even when neutral markers provide genetic homogeneity across populations. Here, 381 SNPs located in transcribed regions were used to assess large‐ and fine‐scale population structure in the European hake (Merluccius merluccius), a widely distributed demersal species of high priority for the European fishery. Analysis of 850 individuals from 19 locations across the entire distribution range showed evidence for several outlier loci, with significantly higher resolving power. While 299 putatively neutral SNPs confirmed the genetic break between basins (FCT = 0.016) and weak differentiation within basins, outlier …
Total citations
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