論文

基本情報

氏名 武山 智博
氏名(カナ) タケヤマ トモヒロ
氏名(英語) Takeyama Tomohiro
所属 生物地球学部 生物地球学科
職名 准教授
researchmap研究者コード 6000026214
researchmap機関 岡山理科大学

題名

Genotyping of two congeneric bitterling fish species by nuclear SNP markers and the detection of hybridization in a sympatric region

単著・共著の別

共著

著者

Hiroki Hata, Rintaro Taniguchi, Naoki Yamashita, Yasuyuki Hashiguchi, Jun Nakajima, Tomohiro Takeyama

概要

Bitterling fish species (subfamily: Acheilognathinae) are endangered in Japan due to habitat loss. The decline of freshwater mussels also enhances the decrease of bitterlings because bitterlings lay eggs in the gills of freshwater mussels. Furthermore, loss of unionid mussels causes hybridization between bitterling species. This study aims to analyze the frequency of hybridization between congeneric species of bitterlings—Tanakia lanceolata and Tanakia limbata—at a well-preserved site, where both species occur naturally and compare this with other regions more severely impacted by human intervention. One part of the irrigation streams of the Asahi River System, Okayama, is inhabited by a natural monument species of Japan, a benthic cobitid, Parabotia curtus, and therefore, the natural substratum and the structurally heterogeneous stream banks are maintained. We collected Tanakia individuals and surveyed mussel density at this well-preserved site. We also developed six nuclear single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers on different chromosomes to distinguish T. lanceolata and T. limbata. These SNP markers effectively determined individuals as being either one of these species or a hybrid. Based on genotyping, eight individuals were determined to be hybrids, whereas 90 and 173 individuals were determined as purebreds of T. lanceolata and T. limbata, respectively. The proportion of hybrid individuals was 3.0% and was relatively low compared to other regions. In addition, five species of unionids were densely distributed in this stream. Prezygotic isolation between sympatric T. lanceolata and T. limbata was established at this well-preserved site, where unionid mussels are densely populated and provide enough breeding substrate for both species.

発表雑誌等の名称

ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH

出版者

38

4

開始ページ

571

終了ページ

582

発行又は発表の年月

2023/07

査読の有無

有り

招待の有無

無し

記述言語

英語

掲載種別

研究論文(学術雑誌)

ISSN

ID:DOI

https://doi.org/10.1111/1440-1703.12387

ID:NAID(CiNiiのID)

ID:PMID

URL

JGlobalID

arXiv ID

ORCIDのPut Code

DBLP ID