Abstract

Mytella strigata (Hanley, 1843) is an invasive mussel species that has rapidly spread in China in recent years. Here, we tested the utility of three mitochondrial gene fragments, COI, 12S, and 16S, and two nuclear gene fragments, D1 28S and 18S-ITS1, for characterizing the levels of genetic diversity among and within populations using 191 M. strigata specimens collected in China to aid ongoing efforts to identify the origin of the invasion as well as molecular genetic studies. M. strigata exhibited two sex-associated haplogroups according to the COI and 12S sequences. The ratio of female-lineage to male-lineage COI and 12S sequences was 149:22 and 72:7, and the genetic distances between haplogroups were 6.56 and 9.17, respectively. Only one haplotype was detected among the 18S-ITS1 sequences (413 bp), and three haplotypes were detected among the D1 28S sequences (296 bp). The haplotype diversity of both the female-lineage COI and 12S sequences was greater than 0.5, and the nucleotide diversity of the 12S, 16S, D1 28S, and 18S-ITS1 sequences was less than 0.005 in all six populations in China. Our findings indicated that COI is the most useful gene fragment for genetic diversity studies of M. strigata populations; D1 28S and 18S-ITS1 sequences would be useful for species identification because of their low intraspecific diversity. Our genetic analysis of the COI sequences revealed Colombia as the most likely origin of M. strigata in China and showed that the invasive populations in China have recently experienced or are currently experiencing a population bottleneck.

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