Abstract

Four mitochondrial DNA segments, ND1, ND6, cyt b and D-loop, were analyzed by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) in 14 tench (Tinca tinca L.) populations located in Europe and Asia; data on 5 Italian populations previously analyzed for the same mtDNA segments were also included in the study. All the considered segments were polymorphic and originated a total of 9 composite haplotypes which were clustered into 2 haplogroups, A and B, possibly corresponding to the Western and Eastern phylogroups previously described in tench. Nine out of 19 populations showed polymorphism, with haplotype diversity ranging from 0.246 to 0.643 and nucleotide diversity from 0.009 to 0.078. Seventy-five percent of the pairwise comparisons were significant, indicating a high between-population variability. The Neighbour-Joining tree revealed the presence of 3 clusters, including pure populations, with only a A or B haplogroup, and mixed populations, with both haplogroups. The possibility of identifying populations with different haplotypes has practical implications for both conservation and supportive stocking.

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