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Antarctic fish Gobionotothen gibberifrons

Version 2.1 published by SCAR - AntOBIS on Jul 20, 2018 SCAR - AntOBIS

The diversification of the teleost suborder Notothenioidei (Perciformes) in Antarctic waters provides one of the most striking examples of a marine adaptive radiation. Along with a number of adaptations to the cold environment, such as the evolution of antifreeze glycoproteins, notothenioids diversified into eight families and at least 130 species. Here, we investigate the genetic population structure of the humped rockcod (Gobionotothen gibberifrons), a benthic notothenioid fish. Six populations were sampled at different locations around the Scotia Sea, comprising a large part of the species’ distribution range (N = 165). Our analyses based on mitochondrial DNA sequence data (352 bp) and eight microsatellite markers reveal a lack of genetic structuring over large geographic distances (¦ST £ 0.058, FST £ 0.005, P values nonsignificant). In order to test whether this was due to passive larval dispersal, we used GPS-tracked drifter trajectories, which approximate movement of passive surface particles with ocean currents. The drifter data indicate that the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) connects the sampling locations in one direction only (west–east), and that passive transport is possible within the 4-month larval period of G. gibberifrons. Indeed, when applying the isolation-with-migration model in IMA, strong unidirectional west-east migration rates are detected in the humped rockcod. This leads us to conclude that, in G. gibberifrons, genetic differentiation is prevented by gene flow via larval dispersal with the ACC. Keywords: adaptive radiation, population genetics, isolation-with-migration model, drifters

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How to cite

Please be aware, this is an old version of the dataset.  Researchers should cite this work as follows:

Matschiner,M., Hanel,R. and Salzburger,W. Gene flow by larval dispersal in the Antarctic notothenioid fish Gobionotothen gibberifrons Mol. Ecol. 18 (12), 2574-2587 (2009)

Rights

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The publisher and rights holder of this work is SCAR - AntOBIS. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 License.

GBIF Registration

This resource has been registered with GBIF, and assigned the following GBIF UUID: 7b5e800e-f762-11e1-a439-00145eb45e9a.  SCAR - AntOBIS publishes this resource, and is itself registered in GBIF as a data publisher endorsed by Ocean Biogeographic Information System.

Keywords

Drifters; Population genetics; Occurrence

External data

The resource data is also available in other formats

Online datasethttp://www.iobis.org/mapper/?dataset=1590 US-ASCII Plain Text
Metadatahttp://www.vliz.be/imis/imis.php?module=dataset&dasid=2001 UTF-8 XML

Contacts

Who created the resource:

Rachel Grant

Who can answer questions about the resource:

Rachel Grant

Who filled in the metadata:

Anton Van de Putte
Antarctic Biodiversity Information Facility (ANTABIF)
http://data.biodiversity.aq

Geographic Coverage

Antarctica

Bounding Coordinates South West [-90, -180], North East [90, 180]

Taxonomic Coverage

urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:11676

Superclass  Pisces [Fish]

Additional Metadata

marine, harvested by iOBIS

Alternative Identifiers 7b5e800e-f762-11e1-a439-00145eb45e9a
http://ipt.biodiversity.aq/resource?r=rachel_gobionotothen_gibberifrons