Biology (Feb 2023)

Identifying Whitemouth Croaker (<i>Micropogonias furnieri</i>) Populations along the Rio de Janeiro Coast, Brazil, through Microsatellite and Otolith Analyses

  • Taynara Pontes Franco,
  • Anderson Vilasboa,
  • Francisco Gerson Araújo,
  • Joana de Moura Gama,
  • Alberto Teodorico Correia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biology12030360
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 360

Abstract

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The inshore area of the Southwestern Atlantic between 22 °S and 29 °S (South Brazilian Bight) is a transitional climatic zone, where the tropical and warm temperate provinces mix. In its northern part, i.e., in the coastal waters of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, local oceanographic conditions, such as upwelling in the north, and great bays with different degrees of anthropogenic influences in the center and south can determine the population structure of several fish stocks. The Whitemouth croaker (Micropogonias furnieri) is one the most heavily exploited fishing resources in this area, but there are still some doubts about its population structure. In this study, through combined analyses using nuclear genetic markers and morphological and geochemical signatures of otoliths, a divergence of individuals between two populations was identified using microsatellites, while a finer spatial structure with three populations (north, center and south, respectively) was found based on otolith shapes and elemental signatures. This regional population structure may have direct implications for rational fisheries management and conservation of the species.

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