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Population genetic structure of sharpbelly (Basilesky, 1855) and morphological diversification along climate gradients in China. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Sharpbelly fish, a small native species in China, is showing high adaptability to diverse environments and is becoming dominant in freshwater ecosystems, driven by environmental disturbances.
  • A study analyzed the genetic structure and body shape variations across 18 populations of Sharpbelly, revealing three distinct clusters and noting that southern populations are generally deeper-bodied compared to their slender northern counterparts.
  • Findings suggest that morphological differences are largely influenced by varying environmental pressures rather than genetic variation, with the Nanling Mountain Range acting as a barrier contributing to genetic differentiation between certain populations.

Article Abstract

Sharpbelly (Basilewski, 1855) is a small, widespread, and native cyprinid fish with prominent habitat suitability and high invasive potential and is becoming the dominant species in freshwater ecosystems under intensified environmental disturbances. But how acclimates to extremely heterogeneous environments remains unclear. In current study, the genetic structure of was analyzed using Bayesian phylogenetic inference, haplotype network, and STRUCTURE base on gene across 18 populations spanning 20 degrees of latitude and 18 degrees of longitude in China. The morphological diversification of body size and shape for along the climate gradient was studied. The results showed that the 18 populations were divided into 3 clusters: one cluster mainly from Huanghe River Basin, another cluster mainly from Yangzi River Basin, and H cluster containing Hainan and Beihai populations. The fish from southern populations were deeper bodied while individuals from northern populations were more slender. Inland individuals were more streamlined while coastal individuals were of deeper body. The partial Mantel test predicts that the potential mechanism underlining the intraspecies morphological diversification along climate gradients is primarily the divergent selection pressures among different environments, while genetic variation had less contribution to morphological differentiation. The formation of the Nanling Mountain Range could drive genetic differentiation between Beihai population and those from Yangzi River Basin. The present results highlight strong selective pressures of climate on widespread species and enrich morphological differentiation basis of acclimation for species with high habitat suitability and invasive potential.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8207360PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7528DOI Listing

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