Zoeken
Zoeken kan via de modus 'eenvoudig zoeken' (één veld) of uitgebreid via 'geavanceerd zoeken' (meerdere velden). Zo kan je bv. zoeken op een combinatie van een auteursnaam (auteur), een jaartal (jaar) en een documenttype.
Boekenmand
Nuttige resultaten kan je aanvinken en toevoegen aan een mandje. De inhoud hiervan kan je exporteren of afdrukken (naar bv. PDF).
RSS
Op de hoogte blijven van nieuw toegevoegde publicaties binnen uw interessegebied? Dit kan door een RSS-feed (?) te maken van jouw zoekopdracht.
nieuwe zoekopdracht
Allozyme electrophoretic analysis of the Hediste limnicola - H. diversicolor - H. japonica species complex (Polychaeta: Nereididae)
Fong, P.P.; Garthwaite, R.L. (1994). Allozyme electrophoretic analysis of the Hediste limnicola - H. diversicolor - H. japonica species complex (Polychaeta: Nereididae). Mar. Biol. (Berl.) 118(3): 463-470. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00350303
In: Marine Biology: International Journal on Life in Oceans and Coastal Waters. Springer: Heidelberg; Berlin. ISSN 0025-3162; e-ISSN 1432-1793
| |
| Trefwoorden |
Disciplines > Biology > Genetics > Population genetics > Gene flow North America, West Coast Polychaeta [WoRMS] East Coast of the United States [Marine Regions]
|
| Author keywords |
|
| Auteurs | | Top |
- Fong, P.P.
- Garthwaite, R.L.
|
|
|
| Abstract |
Three morphologically similar species of the polychaete genus Hediste [H. limnicola (Johnson, 1901), H. diversicolor (O. F. Müller, 1776), and H. japonica (Izuka, 1908)] have been described, respectively, from the west coast of North America, Europe, and Japan. Although these taxa are geographically isolated by oceans, the morphological criteria by which they can be separated are sufficiently variable as to make identification difficult. We have compared these three taxa biochemically using ten allozyme loci and have found that they are genetically distinct and constitute valid species. H. japonica (collected in June 1990 from Kyushu, Japan) appears more closely related to H. limnicola (collected in July 1989 from two sites in California and two in Oregon, USA) than it is to H. diversicolor (collected in October-November 1989 from the Weser estuary and the Jadebusen in Germany). H. limnicola has been recognized previously as a self-fertilizing hermaphrodite, but it is quite polymorphic in the four populations examined and we suggest that some cross-fertilization must occur in the field. Marked allele frequency differences between the two H. diversicolor populations examined, which were separated by only about 30 km, suggested that there was restricted gene flow between populations, or that there had been strong short-term selection. |
IMIS is ontwikkeld en wordt gehost door het VLIZ.