Comparative body shape variation of the European grayling Thymallus thymallus (Actinopterygii, Salmonidae) from wild populations and hatcheries

被引:4
作者
Bajic, Aleksandar [1 ]
Jojic, Vida [2 ]
Snoj, Ales [3 ]
Miljanovic, Branko [1 ]
Askeyev, Oleg [4 ]
Askeyev, Igor [4 ]
Maric, Sasa [3 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Novi Sad, Fac Sci, Dept Biol & Ecol, Trg D Obradov 2, Novi Sad 21000, Serbia
[2] Univ Belgrade, Inst Biol Res Sinia Stankovic, Dept Genet Res, Bulevar Despota Stefana 142, Belgrade 11060, Serbia
[3] Univ Ljubljana, Biotech Fac, Dept Anim Sci, Groblje 3, Domzale 1230, Slovenia
[4] Tatarstan Acad Sci, Inst Problems Ecol & Mineral Wealth, Daurskaya 28, Kazan 420087, Tatarstan Repub, Russia
[5] Univ Belgrade, Fac Biol, Inst Zool, Studentski Trg 16, Belgrade 11001, Serbia
来源
ZOOLOGISCHER ANZEIGER | 2018年 / 272卷
关键词
Allometry; Geometric morphometrics; Morphological variation; Shape; Size; GENETIC-ANALYSIS; ATLANTIC SALMON; MITOCHONDRIAL; PHYLOGEOGRAPHY; FISHES; DIFFERENTIATION; MORPHOMETRICS; COLONIZATION; DIVERGENCE; MANAGEMENT;
D O I
10.1016/j.jcz.2017.12.005
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
We employed geometric morphometric techniques to investigate external (body) morphology of European grayling (Thymallus thymallus) populations from the wild and hatchery facilities. Wild graylings were representative of Balkan and Caspian phylogenetic clades, whereas hatchery-reared specimens originated from Balkan and Adriatic phylogenetic clades. Individuals of T. thymallus from the Adriatic phylogenetic clade were the largest, followed by those from the Balkan phylogenetic clade, while graylings from the Caspian phylogenetic clade were the smallest. Graylings from hatchery facilities were larger than graylings from the wild. Body shape variation in T. thymallus coincides with genetic differentiation of the analyzed populations, whereas it is less influenced by difference in environment they experience in wild and captive habitats. Although hatcheries can generate large numbers of individuals, some of which will have an extreme phenotype, the variance in body shape was similar in captive and wild populations. Allometric relations were different between specimens from the wild and from hatchery facilities, as well as among those belonging to different phylogenetic clades. Allometric analyses performed separately for the wild and hatchery-reared populations revealed significant effect of allometry and similar trends in size-related shape variation among populations from different phylogenetic clades. We found that phenetic relationships among the studied wild grayling populations inferred from non-allometric body shape variation better reflected their phylogenetic relationships than equivalent data from hatchery populations.
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页码:73 / 80
页数:8
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