KMID : 0613820060160050812
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Journal of Life Science 2006 Volume.16 No. 5 p.812 ~ p.817
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Mitochondrial DNA Polymorphism of the Japanese Anchovy ( Engraulis japonicus Temminck & Schlegel) Collected from the Korean Offshore and Inshore Waters
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Cho Eun-Seob
Kim Joo-Il
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Abstract
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To investigate the population structure and geographic distance among anchovies (Engraulis japonicus) in Korea, we compared and analyzed the mitochondrial DNA control region sequences (227 bp) of anchovies from 12 localities in inshore and offshore waters. The sequence analysis of 84 individuals showed 29 haplotypes, ranging in sequence divergence by pairwise comparisons from 0.3% to 3.5% (1 bp-12 bp). E9 haplotype of anchovies were found largely in inshore waters and also in offshore waters, which was regarded as the major source in Korean waters (58.3%). However, E26, E27, E28, and E29 haplotypes were found in westsouthern (locality 10, four among 7). Phylogenetic analysis using PHYLIP was divided into two clades (clade A and B). Most of the haplotypes, excluding E26, E27, E28, and E29, were strongly supported by bootstrap analysis (£¾75%), whereas the relationship between clade A and B was weakly supported by bootstrap analysis (51%). High levels of genetic diversity were found; haplotype diversity (H)=0.75-1.00, and nucleotide diversity (¥ð)=0.015-0.0244. Analysis of FST between populations in inshore waters ranged in 0.01-0.05, whereas those of offshore waters ranged in 0.01-0.58. A high gene flow occurred in inshore (Nm=22.61-34.22) and offshore (Nm=11.57-45.67) populations. The distribution of mitochondrial DNA haplotypes between westsouthern and other populations was suggestive of significantly different differentiation (FST=0.20-0.59, p£¼0.05; d=0.52, p=0.00; ¥Õ=0.02-0.41, p£¼0.05). These results suggested that the overall anchovy population in the Korean peninsula caused considerable migration due to the mitochondrial gene flow between inshore and offshore populations to form a genetically homogenous and panmictic structure, although a heterogeneous population was found in this study.
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KEYWORD
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Engraulis japonicus, geographic distance, population structure, gene flow, mtDNA, control region
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