Frontiers in Marine Science (Apr 2022)

Composition, Demographic History, and Population Structures of Trichiurus

  • Kui-Ching Hsu,
  • Mu-Rong Yi,
  • Mu-Rong Yi,
  • Sui Gu,
  • Xiong-Bo He,
  • Xiong-Bo He,
  • Zhi-Sen Luo,
  • Bin Kang,
  • Hung-Du Lin,
  • Yun-Rong Yan,
  • Yun-Rong Yan,
  • Yun-Rong Yan,
  • Yun-Rong Yan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2022.875042
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Sequences of the complete mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene were used to identify Trichiurus species and examine their population genetic structure and demographic history along the coast of China. Three Trichiurus species were found. Trichiurus japonicus lives in colder waters along the continental shelves in the China Seas, while Trichiurus nanhaiensis lives warmer waters along continental slopes in the South China Sea, and Trichiurus brevis lives in shallow and warmer waters in the South China Sea. The migrations of these species were mainly associated with feeding and spawning preferences. Two major wintering and spawning grounds in the East China Sea and South China Sea were found. All species showed a lack of population genetic structure resulting from their oceanodromous life cycle (the degree of population substructure index NST = 0.000–0.149), but the results of approximate Bayesian computational approaches suggested population declines or stabilization and differentiation. The results of the TMRCA (time to the most recent common ancestor) showed that during glaciations, the Yellow Sea and the East China Sea were completely exposed, and the South China Sea acted as a refugium. Thus, the populations of these three species experienced differentiation during glaciations. This study also examined the limitations of Bayesian skyline plot analysis.

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