scholarly journals A preliminary study of the allozyme variation in the grey hamster, Cricetulus migratorius (Mammalia: Rodentia), from the Asian part of Turkey

2011 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 381-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Osman İbiş ◽  
Coşkun Tez ◽  
Servet Özcan ◽  
Metin Kiliç ◽  
Murat Telcioğlu

The aim of the present study was to evaluate the degree of genetic variation and divergence by cellulose acetate gel electrophoresis between samples of Cricetulus migratorius, a cricetine rodent distributed in the Asian part (Anatolia) of Turkey. Out of twenty allozyme loci scored for fifteen enzyme systems, eleven loci were detected to be polymorphic in at least one locality of the Turkish C. migratorius. Indices of genetic variability (the percentage of polymorphic loci, mean number of alleles per locus, and mean observed and expected heterozygosities) were found to be P(95%) = 28, A = 1.3, Ho = 0.226 and He = 0.218, respectively. Nei?s unbiased genetic distances ranged from 0.000 to 0.153, with an average value of 0.069. The mean gene flow was calculated to be Nm = 0.7484. This is a preliminary study describing the allozymic variations of C. migratorius from Turkey. As there are no extensive data on the allozymic variations of C. migratorius from other regions, our results could not be compared, in detail with those of other populations of the species C. migratorius.

2001 ◽  
Vol 79 (4) ◽  
pp. 457-463 ◽  
Author(s):  
Man Kyu Huh

Genetic diversity and population structure of 22 Carex humilis var. nana Ohwi (Cyperaceae) populations in Korea were determined using genetic variation at 23 allozyme loci. This is a long-lived herbaceous species with a widespread distribution in eastern Asia. The 12 enzymes revealed 23 putative loci, of which 11 were polymorphic (47.8%). Genetic diversity at the varietal level and at the population level was 0.131 and 0.118, respectively. Total genetic diversity (HT = 0.274) and within population genetic diversity (HS = 0.256) were high, whereas the extent of the population divergence was relatively low (GST = 0.068). An indirect estimate of the number of migrants per generation (Nm = 3.42) indicated that gene flow was high among Korean populations. Wide geographic ranges, perennial herbaceous nature, and the persistence of multiple generations are associated with the high level of genetic variation. A distinct difference between Asian and North American Carex is shown in the proportion of genetic variation (GST) (p < 0.001). The mean GST of Asian Carex was estimated as 0.056; thus, only 5.6% of genetic variability was distributed among populations, whereas the mean GST of North American Carex was estimated as 19.5% (3.5 times higher). It is probable that the geographical distance between population pairs and presence or absence of glacial history may play roles in the substantial difference between both groups.Key words: Carex humilis var. nana, genetic diversity, population structure.


Author(s):  
Iain F. Wilson ◽  
Elizabeth M. Gosling ◽  
William Tapper

Eight samples of Littorina tenebrosa and L. saxatilis (Mollusca: Gastropoda) from Ireland and Britain, including pairs of each form from two locations in Ireland, were screened for genetic variation at 12 polymorphic enzyme loci using starch gel electrophoresis. Levels of polymorphism and heterozygosity were similar in L. tenebrosa and L. saxatilis, apart from a sample of L. tenebrosa from Britain which was less polymorphic than the Irish samples. No alleles were found to be unique to either form. Phylogenetic analysis using UPGMA showed that L. saxatilis and L. tenebrosa populations clustered as a monophyletic group. Nevertheless, the mean genetic distance between parapatric populations of L. saxatilis and L. tenebrosa (D=0.076) was similar to the mean for allopatric populations of either species (D=0.080). This indicates that there is a barrier to gene flow between the two forms Despite this, L. tenebrosa does not merit specific status since populations of this snail do not cluster as a distinct group, separate from L. saxatilis populations.


1985 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanne C. Daly ◽  
Peter Gregg

AbstractGenetic (electrophoretic) variation was examined in the two pest species of Heliothis found in Australia, H. armigera (Hübner) and H. punctigera Wallengren. They could be differentiated by seven loci which enabled identification of individual eggs and small larvae not normally distinguishable by their morphology. The traditional criteria for distinguishing the larger larvae of the two species were shown to be unreliable. The genetic distance between the two species was 0·34 ± 0·02. The percentage of loci polymorphic in both species, 32%, and the mean heterozygosities, 11·3% for H. armigera and 10·8% for H. punctigera, are lower than those reported in the American species, H. virescens (F.) and H. zea (Boddie). Populations throughout Australia were differentiated from each other, but there did not appear to be a marked geographic pattern to the variation. Genetic distances between populations of H. armigera were low (<0·01). It was concluded that the effective population size of Heliothis is large and that significant gene flow probably occurs between widely separated regions.


Genetics ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 92 (3) ◽  
pp. 1005-1021
Author(s):  
Charles Mitter ◽  
Douglas J Futuyma

ABSTRACT By surveying variation at allozyme loci in several phytophagous lepidopteran species (Geometridae), we have tested two hypotheses about the relationship of genetic variation to environmental heterogeneity: (1) that allozyme polymorphisms may exist because of associations between genotypes and "niches" (different host plants, in this instance), and (2) that the overall genetic variation of a species is correlated with environmental heterogeneity (or breadth of the species' overall ecological niche) .—Genetic differentiation among samples of oligophagous or polyphagous species taken from different host species was observed in one of three species, at only one of seven polymorphic loci. The data thus provide no evidence for pronounced genetic sub-structuring, or "host race" formation in these sexually reproducing species, although host plant-genotype associations in a parthenogenetic moth give evidence of the potential for diversifying selection.—In a comparison of allozyme variation in polyphagous ("generalized") and oligophagous ("specialized") species, heterozygosity appeared to be higher in specialized species, at all polymorphic loci but one. I t is possible that this unexpected result arises from a functional relation between breadth of diet and genetic variation.


1985 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 224-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. R. Rhomberg ◽  
S. Joseph ◽  
R. S. Singh

Patterns of geographic and seasonal genetic variation were assessed in natural populations of cyclically parthenogenetic rose aphids Macrosiphum rosae (L.). Nine populations were studied for a red–green colour morph and 30 allozyme loci (20 coding for enzymes and 10 for abundant proteins). Genetic variation was found at 5 of 20 enzyme loci (20%); all 10 abundant proteins proved monomorphic. The average heterozygosity was 4.3%. At some polymorphic loci genotypic frequencies showed significant deviations from Hardy–Weinberg proportions. Six local populations from Hamilton, Ontario, were studied for seasonal variation at the colour locus and at two polymorphic esterase loci (Est-2 and Est-4). All three loci showed large changes in genotypic frequencies over the season during the asexual cycle, but only for Est-4 were changes consistent among populations. This locus undergoes a regular seasonal cycle, the directional changes during the asexual phase presumably being balanced by changes during the sexual phase. The frequencies of three-locus genotypes within each locality fluctuated dramatically over the course of a season, reflecting the domination of local infestations by a few particularly successful clones. We speculate that because of such clonal competition followed by extensive migration, much of the selectively neutral variation is purged from aphid populations. The remaining polymorphic loci, which are mostly di- or tri-allelic, are subject to balancing natural selection at the gene or at closely linked loci. The Est-4 in rose aphids is an example of such a selectively maintained polymorphism.Key words: aphids, allozyme variation, seasonal variation, parthenogenesis, clonal selection, population structure.


2004 ◽  
Vol 34 (12) ◽  
pp. 2611-2617 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gancho T Slavov ◽  
Peter Zhelev

Genetic variation of 17 populations of Pinus mugo Turra was studied using 10 polymorphic allozyme loci. Polymorphism and gene diversity in these populations were comparable to mean values for gymnosperm species, but slightly lower than in pines with large and continuous ranges. We did not find significant interpopulation differentiation (FST = 0.041) or isolation by distance, suggesting that gene flow might be extensive or that the time elapsed since the species range became fragmented has been too short for genetic differentiation to arise via genetic drift. We detected moderate and statistically significant levels of inbreeding (mean FIS = 0.252) for all loci in all populations. Although there are many possible explanations for this nonequilibrium population structure, we propose that the main reasons for its ubiquity are the peculiar growth form and reproductive biology of P. mugo, which promote excessive near-neighbor pollinations. Populations in Vitosha Mountain and western Stara Planina had the highest levels of inbreeding and the lowest observed heterozygosities. All populations in these mountains are small and isolated, but none of them is under a special regime of protection. Thus, the conservation status of P. mugo populations in Vitosha Mountain and western Stara Planina may deserve reevaluation. Future gene conservation efforts should focus on obtaining information on the genetic variation of adaptive traits in P. mugo.


2002 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison Shapcott

Triunia robusta, which until recently was thought to be extinct, is now classified nationally as endangered. It is an understorey species restricted to the subcoastal rainforests in a small region of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland. The project involved sampling the genetic variation and measuring the population size and size distribution of T. robusta and its geographically closest congener T. youngiana, which occurs further south and has a wider geographic distribution. A total of 877 T. robusta plants were recorded across the 11 populations, approximately half (56.8&percnt;) of these were juveniles less than 1 m tall, whereas in T. youngiana only about 36.4&percnt; of a population was composed of juveniles. Genetic diversity was similar but significantly higher for T. robusta than T. youngiana if the very small T. robusta populations (2 or 3 plants) were excluded from analysis (P &lt; 0.05). The mean percentage of polymorphic loci among populations was high for both species. Triunia robusta is not, on average, more inbred than the more common T. youngiana. There was more differentiation between the T. robusta populations, which were in close proximity, than between the more geographically separated T. youngiana populations. Thus, there is evidence of more gene flow between populations of T. youngiana than between those of T. robusta. However, there was no geographic relationship between genetic similarity and geographic proximity in T. robusta


Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 2633
Author(s):  
Poh Chiang Chew ◽  
Annie Christianus ◽  
Jaapar M. Zudaidy ◽  
Md Yasin Ina-Salwany ◽  
Chou Min Chong ◽  
...  

In this study, a mixture of Tor tambra and T. tambroides with unknown genetic background were collected from 11 localities in Malaysia for broodstock development and sperm cryo-banking. This study aims to assess the microsatellite (simple sequence repeat, SSR) variation, genetic diversity, genetic differentiation, level of gene flow, population structure, genetic relatedness and their demographic aspects among these Tor populations, in addition to establishing their SSR profile by employing 22 SSR markers via fragment analysis. Total genomic DNA was extracted from 181 samples (91 cryopreserved milt samples and 90 scale samples of live broodfish). Results showed the Tor spp. collection retained their genetic variation but exhibited excessive homozygosity among individuals within population. Moderate genetic differentiation was shown among the populations, with highly significant (p < 0.001) fixation indices (FST, FIS and FIT). A low gene flow over all loci (Nm 1.548) indicates little genetic variation transfer between populations. The genetic structures of all the populations were successfully resolved into four main clusters by an unweighted pair group method with arithmetic mean (UPGMA) dendrogram generated based on Nei’s genetic distances. The population structures based on principal coordinates analysis (PCoA) and the Bayesian model also suggested four distinct clusters following geographical regions and eight closely related populations. This study provided a useful baseline reference for better genetic management and utilization of the Tor spp. stocks in their breeding and conservation programmes.


1988 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 273 ◽  
Author(s):  
DJ Coates

There are 10 known populations of Acacia anomala occurring in two small disjunct groups some 30 km apart. The Chittering populations reproduce sexually whereas the Kalamunda populations appear to reproduce almost exclusively by vegetative multiplication. The level and distribution of genetic variation were studied at 15 allozyme loci. Two loci were monomorphic in all populations. In the Chittering populations the mean number of alleles per locus was 2.0 and the expected panmictic heterozygosity (genetic diversity) 0.209. In the Kalamunda populations the mean number of alleles per locus was 1.15 and the expected panmictic heterozygosity 0.079, although the observed heterozygosity of 0.150 was only marginally less than the Chittering populations (0.177). These data support the contention that the Chittering populations are primarily outcrossing whereas the Kalamunda populations are clonal, with each population consisting of individuals with identical and, in three of the four populations, heterozygous, multilocus genotypes. The level of genetic diversity within the Chittering populations is high for plants in general even though most populations are relatively smsll and isolated. It is proposed that either the length of time these populations have been reduced in size and isolated is insufficient for genetic diversity to be reduced or the genetic system of this species is adapted to small population conditions. Strategies for the adequate conservation of the genetic resources of Acacia anomala are discussed.


1985 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 533-538 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fred R. Ganders ◽  
Susan K. Denny ◽  
David Tsai

Samples from 10 populations of Amsinckia spectabilis var. spectabilis and three populations of A. spectabilis var. microcarpa were analyzed for allelic variation at 17 allozyme loci using stareh gel electrophoresis. This species is a self-compatible annual which has heterostylous populations, homostylous populations, and mixed populations containing heterostylous and homostylous plants. Heterostylous populations had the highest outcrossing rates, homostylous populations the lowest, and mixed populations were intermediate in outcrossing rate. Outcrossing rate is highly correlated with the average stigma–anther separation in flowers in the populations. Genetic variability was highest in heterostylous populations, lowest in homostylous populations, and was intermediate in mixed populations, although one large homostylous population was as variable as were mixed populations. Genetic identities among populations were very high with the exception of the two northernmost, isolated homostylous populations which were fixed for rare alleles at some loci. In the rest of the populations, genetic identities were higher between populations of the same taxonomic variety than they were in intervarietal comparisons.


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