Small effective number of parents (N-b) inferred for a naturally spawned cohort of juvenile European flat oysters Ostrea edulis Auteur(s) : Hedgecock, Denis Launey, Sophie Pudovkin, A. I. Naciri, Yamama Lapegue, Sylvie Bonhomme, Francois Éditeur(s) : Springer Résumé : The great fecundity and very high larval mortality of most marine invertebrates and fish make possible substantial variance in the number of offspring contributed by adults to subsequent generations. The reproductive success of such organisms may thus resemble a sweepstakes lottery, in which a minority of progenitors succeeds in replacing an entire population, while the majority fails to procreate. One specific prediction of this hypothesis, that genetic diversity of newly settled cohorts should be less than that of the adult population, is tested in the present study. Microsatellite DNA markers were examined in naturally spawned juvenile European flat oysters Ostrea edulis (L.), collected over a 12-day period in 1993 from the western Mediterranean Sea, near Sete, France (43 degrees 32'N, 3 degrees 56'E) and grown out for a period of up to 10 months. Variation in these juveniles was compared to that in a pooled sample of adults collected in 1994 from two locations (Thau Lagoon and Port St. Louis) that had statistically homogeneous allelic frequencies. Though nearly twice as large as the pooled adult sample, the juvenile sample had only 60% of the adult allelic diversity. Analyses of linkage disequilibrium and kinship, as well as estimation of the effective number of parents, suggested that 10-20 adults produced this juvenile cohort. This observation supports the hypothesis of sweepstakes reproductive success and suggests that partial inbreeding may occur even in species with large populations and dispersing planktonic larvae. Marine Biology (0025-3162) (Springer), 2007-03 , Vol. 150 , N. 6 , P. 1173-1182 Droits : 2007 Springer http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/2007/publication-2616.pdf DOI:10.1007/s00227-006-0441-y http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/2616/ | Partager |
Species polyphyly and mtDNA introgression among three Serrasalmus sister-species Auteur(s) : Hubert, Nicolas Torrico, Juan Pablo Bonhomme, Francois Renno, Jean-francois Éditeur(s) : Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science Molecular Phylogenetics And Evolution (1055-7903) (Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science), 2008-01 , Vol. 46 , N. 1 , P. 375-381 Droits : 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/2008/publication-3736.pdf DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2007.04.002 http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/3736/ | Partager |
Speciation in the Deep Sea: Multi-Locus Analysis of Divergence and Gene Flow between Two Hybridizing Species of Hydrothermal Vent Mussels Auteur(s) : Faure, Baptiste Jollivet, Didier Tanguy, Arnaud Bonhomme, Francois Bierne, Nicolas Éditeur(s) : Public Library Science Résumé : Background: Reconstructing the history of divergence and gene flow between closely-related organisms has long been a difficult task of evolutionary genetics. Recently, new approaches based on the coalescence theory have been developed to test the existence of gene flow during the process of divergence. The deep sea is a motivating place to apply these new approaches. Differentiation by adaptation can be driven by the heterogeneity of the hydrothermal environment while populations should not have been strongly perturbed by climatic oscillations, the main cause of geographic isolation at the surface. Methodology/Principal Finding: Samples of DNA sequences were obtained for seven nuclear loci and a mitochondrial locus in order to conduct a multi-locus analysis of divergence and gene flow between two closely related and hybridizing species of hydrothermal vent mussels, Bathymodiolus azoricus and B. puteoserpentis. The analysis revealed that (i) the two species have started to diverge approximately 0.760 million years ago, (ii) the B. azoricus population size was 2 to 5 time greater than the B. puteoserpentis and the ancestral population and (iii) gene flow between the two species occurred over the complete species range and was mainly asymmetric, at least for the chromosomal regions studied. Conclusions/Significance: A long history of gene flow has been detected between the two Bathymodiolus species. However, it proved very difficult to conclusively distinguish secondary introgression from ongoing parapatric differentiation. As powerful as coalescence approaches could be, we are left by the fact that natural populations often deviates from standard assumptions of the underlying model. A more direct observation of the history of recombination at one of the seven loci studied suggests an initial period of allopatric differentiation during which recombination was blocked between lineages. Even in the deep sea, geographic isolation may well be a crucial promoter of speciation. Plos One (1932-6203) (Public Library Science), 2009-08 , Vol. 4 , N. 8 , P. 1-15 Droits : 2009 Faure et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00129/24012/21972.pdf DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0006485 http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00129/24012/ | Partager |
Microsatellite-associated heterosis in hatchery-propagated stocks of the shrimp Penaeus stylirostris Auteur(s) : Bierne, Nicolas Bezuart, Ivan Vonau, Vincent Bonhomme, François Bedier, Edouard Éditeur(s) : Elsevier Résumé : Correlation between DNA microsatellite heterozygosity and growth rate was investigated in two hatchery-propagated stocks of the shrimp Penaeus stylirostris, which had been genetically isolated from wild founders for 17 generations, and from each other for five more generations. presumed demographic history of these populations suggested that they were maintained at small effective population sizes. and this was confirmed by significant changes in allelic frequencies between the two stocks. Despite a small sample size (n = 60) and a small number of loci screened, a significant positive correlation was detected between microsatellite tri-locus heterozygosity and growth rate in one of the two stocks (r = 0.3, P = 0.02). In the other stock (n = 48), the positive correlation was not significant, but the combined test of single locus heterozygote advantage over the three loci was significant (P = 0.005).Use of DNA microsatellite markers, whose selectively neutral status is generally accepted, allowed us to reject the hypothesis of direct overdominance at marker loci as an explanation for an association of growth rate with heterozygosity. The average depression associated with one locus in our case is above or equivalent to the amount observed for a 10% increase of inbreeding in other species. These results suggest that heterozygosity at neutral marker loci is sufficiently well correlated with individual inbreeding coefficients to reveal a significant residual inbreeding load for growth rate in Tahitian P. stylirostris stocks. Inbreeding during hatchery propagation was, thus, insufficient to purge the ancestral load. Aquaculture (0044-8486) (Elsevier), 2000-04 , Vol. 184 , N. 3-4 , P. 203-219 Droits : 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/2000/publication-753.pdf DOI:10.1016/S0044-8486(99)00331-2 http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/753/ | Partager Voir aussi Penaeus stylirostris Heterozygosity Marker associated heterosis Inbreeding depression Microsatellites Télécharger |
Evolutionary Patterns in Pearl Oysters of the Genus Pinctada (Bivalvia: Pteriidae) Auteur(s) : Cunha, Regina L. Blanc, Francoise Bonhomme, Francois Arnaud-haond, Sophie Éditeur(s) : Springer Résumé : Pearl oysters belonging to the genus Pinctada (Bivalvia: Pteriidae) are widely distributed between the Indo-Pacific and western Atlantic. The existence of both widely distributed and more restricted species makes this group a suitable model to study diversification patterns and prevailing modes of speciation. Phylogenies of eight out of the 11 currently recognised Pinctada species using mitochondrial (cox1) and nuclear (18S rRNA) data yielded two monophyletic groups that correspond to shell size and presence/absence of hinge teeth. Character trace of these morphological characters onto the molecular phylogeny revealed a strong correlation. Pinctada margaritifera appears polyphyletic with specimens from Mauritius grouping in a different clade from others of the French Polynesia and Japan. Hence, P. margaritifera might represent a species complex, and specimens from Mauritius could represent a different species. Regarding the putative species complex Pinctada fucata/Pinctada martensii/Pinctada radiata/Pinctada imbricata, our molecular analyses question the taxonomic validity of the morphological characters used to discriminate P. fucata and P. martensii that exhibited the lowest genetic divergence and are most likely conspecific as they clustered together. P. radiata and P. imbricata were recovered as monophyletic. The absence of overlapping distributions between sister lineages and the observed isolation by distance suggests that allopatry is the prevailing speciation mode in Pinctada. Bayesian dating analysis indicated a Miocene origin for the genus, which is consistent with the fossil record. The northward movement of the Australian plate throughout the Miocene played an important role in the diversification process within Pinctada. Marine Biotechnology (1436-2228) (Springer), 2011-04 , Vol. 13 , N. 2 , P. 181-192 Droits : Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2010 http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00035/14635/14015.pdf DOI:10.1007/s10126-010-9278-y http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00035/14635/ | Partager |
Genetic diversity, clonality and connectivity in the scleractinian coral Pocillopora damicornis: a multi-scale analysis in an insular, fragmented reef system Auteur(s) : Adjeroud, Mehdi Guerecheau, Aurelie Vidal-dupiol, Jeremie Flot, Jean-francois Arnaud-haond, Sophie Bonhomme, Francois Éditeur(s) : Springer Résumé : Clonality and genetic structure of the coral Pocillopora damicornis sensu lato were assessed using five microsatellites in 12 populations from four islands of the Society Archipelago (French Polynesia) sampled in June 2008. The 427 analysed specimens fell into 132 multilocus genotypes (MLGs), suggesting that asexual reproduction plays an important role in the maintenance of these populations. A haploweb analysis of ITS2 sequences of each MLG was consistent with all of them being conspecific. Genetic differentiation was detected both between and within islands, but when a single sample per MLG was included in the analyses, the populations turned out to be nearly panmictic. These observations provide further evidence of the marked variability in reproductive strategies and genetic structure of P. damicornis throughout its geographic range; comparison with results previously obtained for the congeneric species Pocillopora meandrina underlines the importance of life history traits in shaping the genetic structure of coral populations Marine Biology (0025-3162) (Springer), 2014-03 , Vol. 161 , N. 3 , P. 531-541 Droits : Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2013 http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00171/28209/26518.pdf DOI:10.1007/s00227-013-2355-9 http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00171/28209/ | Partager |