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Anthropogenic habitat interconnection provokes homogenization of allopatric freshwater fish: concordance of genetic and phenotypic evidence

Title
Anthropogenic habitat interconnection provokes homogenization of allopatric freshwater fish: concordance of genetic and phenotypic evidence
Authors
Heo J.Jeon Y.-S.Ko M.-H.Won Y.-J.
Ewha Authors
원용진
SCOPUS Author ID
원용진scopus
Issue Date
2022
Journal Title
Hydrobiologia
ISSN
0018-8158JCR Link
Citation
Hydrobiologia vol. 849, no. 15, pp. 3335 - 3350
Keywords
Anthropogenic habitat alterationCobitis fishConservationHybridizationIntroduced speciesSecondary contact
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Anthropogenic habitat alteration can rapidly disturb native fish species by hybridization with introduced species. In Korea, the construction of water conduits has unilaterally introduced the allopatrically separated fish species Cobitis tetralineata from the Seomjin River to the Dongjin River where its sister species C. nalbanti inhabits. To assess the impact of this secondary contact on the native species, we investigated the genetic and phenotypic characteristics of populations from the known hybrid zone and other river tributaries of the Dongjin River. Genetic studies of eight microsatellites, one mitochondrial gene, and five protein-coding nuclear genes showed a consistent admixture pattern. Multivariate morphological analysis with 29 meristic and morphometric characters exhibited hybrid populations’ morphological intermediacy to their two parental species. However, all the tributaries being confluent downstream of the Dongjin River were free from hybridization, protecting the native purebred species from the risk of genomic extinction. The present study calls attention to a genetic survey throughout the whole distributional range of native fish species to identify the location containing purebred natives and to evaluate the extent of hybridization, and helps set a conservation priority to prevent further expansion of the current genetic invasion. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
DOI
10.1007/s10750-022-04937-2
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자연과학대학 > 생명과학전공 > Journal papers
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