Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 11 Feb 2020

Phylogeography of the Pacific Red Snapper (Lutjanus peru) and Spotted Rose Snapper (Lutjanus guttatus) in the Inshore Tropical Eastern Pacific

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Page Range: 61 – 71
DOI: 10.1643/CG-18-157
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The inshore Tropical Eastern Pacific (TEP) comprises two major biogeographic provinces, the Cortez Province and Panamic Province, which are distinguished mainly by environmental differences between equatorial and subtropical regions. It is important to evaluate the influence of these environmental differences in limiting the connectivity of populations of fishes inhabiting both provinces and therefore shaping the phylogeographic patterns along the inshore TEP. Here, we used analyses based on sequences of the mtDNA control region to identify phylogeographic patterns of two snapper species, Lutjanus guttatus and L. peru, found in the coastal TEP. In both species, we found high levels of genetic diversity and a lack of genetic differentiation—as measured by both genetic fixation and genetic differentiation indices—between populations from the Cortez and the Panamic provinces. Our results suggest no significant effect of environmental differences between equatorial and subtropical waters in these two provinces on genetic differentiation, which may be explained by oceanographic features that promote larval dispersal and gene flow.

Copyright: © 2020 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
<bold>Fig. 1</bold>
Fig. 1

Sampling localities for L. guttatus and L. peru along the TEP. Dots delineate the biogeographic provinces within the TEP that overlaps with the distribution range of the studied species. SR: Santa Rosalía, LOR: Loreto, LP: La Paz, TS: Todos Santos, SIN: Sinaloa, NAY: Nayarit, COL: Colima, OAX: Oaxaca, SAL: El Salvador, PAN: Panama, ECU: Ecuador.


<bold>Fig. 2</bold>
Fig. 2

TCS networks for (A) L. gutttatus and (B) L. peru inferred for the mtDNA D-loop region; circle size is proportional to the frequency, and colors correspond to biogeographic origin of haplotypes. Black dots represent unsampled haplotypes.


<bold>Fig. 3</bold>
Fig. 3

Distribution of mismatches for mtDNA D-loop region in L. guttatus and L. peru, separated by biogeographic provinces. Observed (bars) and expected (lines) values are shown.


<bold>Fig. 4</bold>
Fig. 4

Bayesian Skyline Plots per species. Estimations for L. guttatus (top) were done using a mutation rate of 1.05% per million years and TrN substitution model. For L. peru (bottom), a mutation rate of 2.32% per million years and GTR substitution model were considered. Shaded area represents 95% confidence interval.


Contributor Notes

Associate Editor: M. T. Craig.

Received: 25 Nov 2018
Accepted: 17 Nov 2019
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