4.4 Article

Analysis of individual year-classes of a marine fish reveals little evidence of first-generation hybrids between cryptic species in sympatric regions

Journal

MARINE BIOLOGY
Volume 158, Issue 8, Pages 1815-1827

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00227-011-1694-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. PADI Foundation
  2. Myers Trust
  3. ASIH Raney Fund
  4. Friends of the Long Marine Lab Fellowship
  5. California Environmental Quality Initiative (CEQI)
  6. Marilyn C. Davis Grant
  7. Packard Foundation
  8. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
  9. David and Lucile Packard Foundation

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As settled juveniles and adults, blue rockfish (Sebastes mystinus) are nonmigratory inhabitants of kelp and rocky reef habitats along the California coast, USA, and prior to settlement, they possess a pelagic larval and juvenile stage lasting 3-5 months. A previous study of adults revealed two cryptic species within S. mystinus and evidence of reproductive isolation in a region where both cryptic adults co-occur. Given this pattern of reproductive isolation, we investigated the degree of hybridization or introgression in individual year-classes shortly after juvenile settlement in two different years (2001 and 2002). Using microsatellite markers, we found little indication of hybridization in new juvenile year-classes despite an adult population that comprised both cryptic species. However, we found an average of two percent of hybrid or introgressed individuals in regions with a low frequency of one of the two species. Therefore, while the lack of hybrids or introgression supports the hypothesis of reproductive isolation between the cryptic species within S. mystinus, the age-structured analysis also revealed a spatial pattern of low-frequency differences in the number of introgressed individuals. These results suggest that reproductive barriers may breakdown when one of the two species predominates the regional adult gene pool.

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