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Genetic structure of the wide-ranging fiddler crab Uca crassipes in the west Pacific region

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2012

Misuzu Aoki*
Affiliation:
KYOUSEI Science Center for Life and Nature, Nara Women's University, Kitauoya-higashimachi, Nara 630-8506, Japan
Keiji Wada
Affiliation:
KYOUSEI Science Center for Life and Nature, Nara Women's University, Kitauoya-higashimachi, Nara 630-8506, Japan
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: M. Aoki, KYOUSEI Science Center for Life and Nature, Nara Women's University, Kitauoya-higashimachi, Nara 630-8506, Japan email: mjiro4203@goo.jp

Abstract

The genetic relationship between fiddler crab Uca crassipes populations from the continental coast, continental islands, and oceanic islands in the west Pacific was investigated using 1039 bp (base pairs)-long combined 12Sr-RNA–16Sr-RNA sequences and a 504-bp mitochondrial DNA control region. The combined 12Sr-RNA–16Sr-RNA sequences indicated that the Vietnamese population, located along the continental coast, and the Chichi-jima population, which is located on an oceanic island north of the Northern Mariana Islands, formed different clades than populations from the other Ryukyu Islands and Moorea Island. Conversely, the Ryukyu Islands and Moorea Island populations exhibited a close genetic relationship, although the mtDNA control region indicated significant differentiation between the Ryukyu Islands and Moorea Island populations. The isolated Vietnam and Chichi-jima populations exhibited higher genetic diversity in the control region than the other populations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2012

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