Papers

Peer-reviewed Lead author Corresponding author
Oct, 2020

Genetic Diversity of Ligidium Isopods in Hokkaido and Niigata, Northern Japan, Based on Mitochondrial DNA Analysis.

Zoological science
  • Wakana Harigai
  • ,
  • Aya Saito
  • ,
  • Hitoshi Suzuki
  • ,
  • Masanobu Yamamoto

Volume
37
Number
5
First page
417
Last page
428
Language
English
Publishing type
Research paper (scientific journal)
DOI
10.2108/zs200017

The genetic diversity of the genus Ligidium in Hokkaido and Niigata, northern Japan, was investigated by analyzing the cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (CO1) region in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). The genetic diversity in Hokkaido was much lower than that in Niigata. Nine different operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were identified. Only a single OTU, most likely Ligidium japonicum, was found in Hokkaido, whereas all nine OTUs were found in Niigata. Using the mtDNA evolutionary rate determined for the marine invertebrate Haptosquilla pulchella (Miers, 1880), population expansion for OTU1 in Hokkaido was estimated to have occurred at 12,600 years BP, suggesting that Ligidium underwent a bottleneck due to glacial cooling, and the population then expanded after postglacial warming. Assuming that the expansion of the OTU1 population occurred at 9600 years BP, when the sea surface temperature rose offshore of Tokachi in the Northwestern Pacific, the evolutionary rate (µ) of the mtDNA CO1 region in Ligidium is calculated as: 0.087 (95% confidence intervals: min: 0.042-max: 0.12) (substitutions/site/million years). The presence of a haplotype common to Hokkaido and Niigata implies that the haplotype migrated across the Tsugaru Strait. Considering that geological evidence indicates that the Tsugaru Strait was continuously present even during the last glacial maximum when the sea level was at its lowest, accidental transport by human beings or animals might have been critical to the migration of Ligidium.

Link information
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2108/zs200017
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32972082
ID information
  • DOI : 10.2108/zs200017
  • Pubmed ID : 32972082

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