Estudio de las variaciones espaciales y temporales de la diversidad genética de la trucha común, Salmo trutta, en ríos de la Península Ibérica

  1. Vera, Manuel
Supervised by:
  1. José Luis García Marín Director

Defence university: Universitat de Girona

Fecha de defensa: 30 May 2007

Committee:
  1. Carles Pla Zanuy Chair
  2. Núria Sanz Ball-Llosera Secretary
  3. Carme Segarra Robert Committee member
  4. Manuel Ruiz Rejón Committee member
  5. Paulino Martínez Portela Committee member

Type: Thesis

Teseo: 134763 DIALNET lock_openTDX editor

Abstract

Brown trout populations from the River Duero basin and from Eastern Pyrenees rivers were analyzed to assess the reasons for contrasting patterns of genetic diversity. Altogether genetic diversity has been analyzed in 49 new collections, 13 from the River Duero basin and 36 from the main rivers of Eastern Pyrenees. Moreover, temporal samples from 14 Pyrenean locations were sampled to analyse temporal stability of the described structure. In these two areas previous studies indicated a strong contrast among diversity patterns in both territories. Results in the Duero basin confirmed the presence of the Atlantic (AT) and the Duero (DU) matriarchal lineages both previously described in this river basin. The analyses of molecular variance (AMOVA) based on the hydrographical hierarchy indicated a high level of population structuring, in accordance with the icthiological pattern observed in this basin. The DU lineage permanently occupied the internal area of the River Duero basin, whereas zones close to the mouth of the river have suffered diverse waves of colonisations of trout belonging to the AT lineage, which would reflect the changes happened in the Quaternary. Discrepancies in the limits between both groups defined by nuclear genes (allozymes) and mitochondrial DNA have been detected. These discrepancies could be due to a more intense effect of genetic drift in mitochondrial DNA than in nuclear markers. Nevertheless, evidences in favour of selection in the mitochondrial DNA of the DU lineage have been described in this work, which also would explain this discrepancy. A detailed analysis of brown trout populations from rivers in the Eastern Pyrenees detected new mitochondrial haplotypes of the Adriatic (AD) and the Mediterranean (ME) lineages. In this region, the AMOVAs indicated that differences between populations within river were larger than differences between rivers. Nevertheless, a pattern of isolation by distance was observed in the whole zone, reflecting population structure within the River Ebro. The AMOVAs showed that the temporal component of the variation is lower than the spatial component, but the temporal fluctuations in the matriarchal comparison of the populations were statistically significant. These fluctuations were associated to both genetic drift and gene flow among close populations. Generally in the river basins, higher differentiation between than within stream was observed. This pattern seems to be widespread in brown trout. The studies on microgeographical scale undertaken in the Noguera Vallferrera and Noguera Cardós (tributaries of Noguera Pallaresa) reproduced the above pattern of differentiation. Effective population sizes and migration rate between both rivers were similar to those described in North-Atlantic populations. In the Noguera Vallferrera as well as in the rest of Pyrenean populations, the female effective sizes (Nef), calculated from mitochondrial DNA were less than a half of the total effective sizes detected. These low female effective sizes also contribute to the observed temporal fluctuations. Hatchery individuals hybridise poorly with the native one, but its presence could indirectly intensify genetic drift and complicate the conservation of the native genetic resources. In spite of selection favouring haplotypes of the DU lineage, population processes controlling the distribution of genetic variability in the Duero and the Eastern Pyrenees river basins could be similar and characterized by the existence of interconnected multiple demes throughout the fluvial course.