Subterranean Biology (Apr 2021)

The Pennsylvania grotto sculpin: population genetics

  • Luis Espinasa,
  • Drake M. Smith,
  • Julianna M. Lindquist

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/subtbiol.38.60865
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38
pp. 47 – 63

Abstract

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The Pennsylvania grotto sculpin is known from just two caves of the Nippenose Valley in central Pennsylvania, USA. They exhibit emergent troglobitic morphological traits and are the second northern-most cave adapted fish in the world. Two mitochondrial (16S rRNA and D-loop gene) and one nuclear (S7 ribosomal protein gene intron) gene in both cave and epigean populations were sequenced. For the three markers, a large proportion of cave specimens possess unique haplotypes not found in their local surface counterparts, suggesting a vicariance in their evolutionary history. The cave population also has haplotypes from two separate lineages of surface sculpins of the Cottus cognatus/bairdii species complex. Since morphology, nuclear, and mitochondrial markers are not correlated among cave individuals, hybridization with introgression is suggested.