Abstract

The northwestern Pacific, characterized by unique tectonic and hydrological settings, has greatly intrigued marine phylogeographers. However, current studies mostly focus on the influence of Pleistocene isolation of sea basins in population structure of species in the region, leaving the contribution of other factors (such as freshwater outflow and environmental gradients) largely unexploited. Here we shed light on the question by investigating phylogeography of the surf clam Mactra chinensis in the East China Sea (ECS). Genetic information was acquired from 501 specimens collected from its main distribution in the region, represented by mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) and nine polymorphic microsatellite loci. A shallow and star-like phylogeny was revealed for all COI haplotypes, indicating the origin of populations from a single refugium. Although no divergent lineages existed, population subdivision was detected in both data sets. The most striking pattern was the significant differentiation between populations north and south of a biogeographic boundary—the Changjiang Estuary, suggesting a barrier effect of the freshwater outflow to gene flow. For the northern group, substructure was revealed by COI result as one southernmost population was significant different from other ones. Clear latitude gradations in allele frequencies were revealed by microsatellite analyses, likely influenced by environmental gradient factors such as temperature. Our results demonstrate that genetic subdivision can arise for populations within the ECS despite they have a single origin, and multiple mechanisms including Changjiang River outflow, environmental gradient factors and life-history traits may act in combination in the process.

Highlights

  • Pinpointing mechanisms facilitating marine population subdivision and speciation has long intrigued biogeographers (e.g., Mayr, 1954; Palumbi, 1992; Miglietta, Faucci & Santini, 2011)

  • Mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) analyses An alignment of 627 bp COI gene was analysed for the 166 individuals, with 59 variable sties yielding a total of 57 unique haplotypes

  • No divergent lineages were inferred for M. chinensis, substantial population subdivision was detected among populations using both COI and microsatellite markers, with somewhat different results: three groups of populations were defined in spatial analysis of molecular variance (SAMOVA) analysis of mitochondrial COI and a significant level of genetic structure was revealed among them with 65.7% of the total variation explained

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Summary

Introduction

Pinpointing mechanisms facilitating marine population subdivision and speciation has long intrigued biogeographers (e.g., Mayr, 1954; Palumbi, 1992; Miglietta, Faucci & Santini, 2011). For the vast region of the northwestern (NW) Pacific, our understanding of its. How to cite this article Ni et al (2015), Population subdivision of the surf clam Mactra chinensis in the East China Sea: Changjiang River outflow is not the sole driver. 40°N 35°N 30°N 25°N 20°N Depth < 120m Sample site Current China Changjiang River SBCC CDW Korea

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