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Patterns of phenotypic and genetic variability show hidden diversity in Scottish Arctic charr
Authors:C E Adams  D Fraser  A J Wilson  G Alexander  M M Ferguson  S Skulason
Institution:Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK;, English Nature, Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, UK;, Institute of Evolutionary Biology, University of Edinburgh, U.K.;, Holar Agricultural College, Holar, Saudarkrokur, Iceland
Abstract:Abstract –  This study examined the degree and pattern of variability in trophic morphology in Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus L. ) at three spatial scales: across 22 populations from Scotland and between and within two adjacent catchments (Laxford and Shin) in northern Scotland. In addition, the variability at six microsatellite loci between and within the Laxford and Shin systems was determined. Habitat use by charr differed significantly between populations. The pattern of variability in trophic morphology, known to influence foraging ability in charr, showed a very high degree of between-population variation with at least 52% of population pairs showing significant differences in head shape. Trophic morphology and genetic variation was also high over small geographical scales; variation being as high between charr from lakes within the same catchment, as between adjacent catchments. The pattern of both phenotypic and genotypic variation suggests a mosaic of variation across populations with geographically close populations often as distinct from each other as populations with much greater separation. Very low levels of effective migrants between populations, even within the same catchment, suggest that this variation is being maintained by very low straying rates between phenotypically and genetically distinct populations, even when there is no apparent barrier to movement. We conclude that the genetic and phenotypic integrity of charr populations across Scotland is high and that this adaptive radiation constitutes a 'hidden' element of diversity in northern freshwater systems. Two consequences of this are that the population (rather than the species) makes a more rational unit for the consideration of conservation strategies and that the habitat requirements and therefore management needs may differ significantly between populations.
Keywords:postglacial invasion              Salvelinus alpinus            allopatric  sympatric divergence  adaptive radiation
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