TY - JOUR
T1 - Microsatellite markers reveal clear geographic structuring among threatened noble crayfish (Astacus astacus) populations in Northern and Central Europe
AU - Gross, Riho
AU - Palm, Stefan
AU - Kõiv, Kuldar
AU - Prestegaard, Tore
AU - Jussila, Japo
AU - Paaver, Tiit
AU - Geist, Juergen
AU - Kokko, Harri
AU - Karjalainen, Anna
AU - Edsman, Lennart
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments We express gratitude to Mr. Margo Hurt for collecting samples from Estonian crayfish populations, to Dr. Pavel Kozák for providing Czech crayfish samples and to Mr. Hans Lindell for providing background information on Finnish crayfish stocks. The work by R. Gross, K. Kõiv and T. Paaver was financed by the Estonian Science Foundation (Grant No. 7348) and the Estonian Ministry of Education and Research (targeted finance grant SF1080022s07 and institutional research funding project IUT8-2). S. Palm acknowledges funding from the Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and Spatial Planning (FOR-MAS; Grant No. 215-2010-1235). L. Edsman and T. Prestegaard acknowledge financial support from the Swedish Board of Fisheries. J. Jussila, A. Karjalainen and H. Kokko acknowledge financing from the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry and the strategic funding of the University of Eastern Finland.
PY - 2013/8
Y1 - 2013/8
N2 - Noble crayfish (Astacus astacus L.), the most highly valued freshwater crayfish in Europe, is threatened due to a long-term population decline caused mainly by the spread of crayfish plague. Reintroduction of the noble crayfish into restored waters is a common practice but the geographic and genetic origin of stocking material has rarely been considered, partially because previous genetic studies have been hampered by lack of nuclear gene markers with known inheritance. This study represents the first large scale population genetic survey of the noble crayfish (633 adults from 18 locations) based on 10 newly developed microsatellite markers. We focused primarily on the Baltic Sea area (Estonia, Finland and Sweden) where the largest proportion of the remaining populations exists. To allow comparisons, samples from the Black Sea catchment (the Danube drainage) were also included. Two highly differentiated population groups were identified corresponding to the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea catchments, respectively. The Baltic Sea catchment populations had significantly lower genetic variation and private allele numbers than the Black Sea catchment populations. Within the Baltic Sea area, a clear genetic structure was revealed with population samples corresponding well to their geographic origin, suggesting little impact of long-distance translocations. The clear genetic structure strongly suggests that the choice of stocking material for re-introductions and supplemental releases needs to be based on empirical genetic knowledge.
AB - Noble crayfish (Astacus astacus L.), the most highly valued freshwater crayfish in Europe, is threatened due to a long-term population decline caused mainly by the spread of crayfish plague. Reintroduction of the noble crayfish into restored waters is a common practice but the geographic and genetic origin of stocking material has rarely been considered, partially because previous genetic studies have been hampered by lack of nuclear gene markers with known inheritance. This study represents the first large scale population genetic survey of the noble crayfish (633 adults from 18 locations) based on 10 newly developed microsatellite markers. We focused primarily on the Baltic Sea area (Estonia, Finland and Sweden) where the largest proportion of the remaining populations exists. To allow comparisons, samples from the Black Sea catchment (the Danube drainage) were also included. Two highly differentiated population groups were identified corresponding to the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea catchments, respectively. The Baltic Sea catchment populations had significantly lower genetic variation and private allele numbers than the Black Sea catchment populations. Within the Baltic Sea area, a clear genetic structure was revealed with population samples corresponding well to their geographic origin, suggesting little impact of long-distance translocations. The clear genetic structure strongly suggests that the choice of stocking material for re-introductions and supplemental releases needs to be based on empirical genetic knowledge.
KW - Conservation genetics
KW - Genetic differentiation
KW - Genetic variation
KW - Microsatellite DNA
KW - Population structure
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84879844337
U2 - 10.1007/s10592-013-0476-9
DO - 10.1007/s10592-013-0476-9
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84879844337
SN - 1566-0621
VL - 14
SP - 809
EP - 821
JO - Conservation Genetics
JF - Conservation Genetics
IS - 4
ER -