Ítem
Viñas de Puig, Jordi | |
Universitat de Girona. Facultat de Ciències | |
Bartres Gordils, David | |
juliol 2024 | |
The Atlantic bonito (Sarda sarda) is an epipelagic and neritic marine fish that inhabits most of
the Mediterranean and the Atlantic’s coasts. It is one of the most important species of small tuna
in these areas due to its economical and nutritional value. Despite its importance, more genetic
information about it and its population structure is required for a better understanding of this
species and possible future management approaches. Here, a review on previous data belonging
to the “Laboratori d’Ictiologia Genètica” of the University of Girona was made through different
genetic and statistical tests. The resulting sample size consists of almost 1000 individuals of S.
sarda, being to our knowledge the most extensive study of this species to date, encompassing
almost all species distribution. Results demonstrate a high molecular variability for Atlantic
bonito throughout studied locations and correlate with a division on two highly differentiated
phylogenetic clades that have already been described in previous studies. These clades appear to
be more abundant in some locations, Clade 1 in the Atlantic side of the African coast and the
eastern Mediterranean and Clade 2 in the North-West Atlantic and the Western Mediterranean.
Clade 1 individuals’ haplotypes are more similar between them but experience an uneven spread
throughout locations, whereas Clade 2 experiences the opposite phenomenon. Population
structure was clearly defined for S. sarda as North-West Atlantic, African Coast and the
Mediterranean Sea. Mediterranean structure (with Portugal included) was divided in the Western
Mediterranean, the Eastern Mediterranean, and Malta, these results, however, did not prove
conclusive enough and more experimentation in that particular field is required, mainly increasing
sample size in the Eastern Mediterranean, specifically the Marmara Sea. Evidence also challenged
the hypothesis of the Strait of Gibraltar constituting a biogeographical barrier and chronological
genetic drift, in spite of that, evidence in favour of geographical genetic drift was found for
Atlantic bonito. To our understanding, this work could improve fishery management in the future
for S. sarda due to the amount of genetical information and characterization it provides on this
species alongside strong and robust evidential data to support it 14 |
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application/pdf | |
http://hdl.handle.net/10256/25895 | |
eng | |
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International | |
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ | |
Bonítol -- Genètica
Bonito – Genetics |
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A Review of Sarda sarda Population Structure Using the Mitochondrial Control Region as a Genetic Marker | |
info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesis | |
DUGiDocs |