6533b85ffe1ef96bd12c139c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Molecular systematics in the acanthocephalan genus Echinorhynchus (sensu lato) in northern Europe

David I. GibsonRisto VäinöläE. T. Valtonen

subject

0106 biological sciencesSystematicsGenotypePopulationHelminthiasisZoologyFresh WaterBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesAcanthocephala030308 mycology & parasitologyFish Diseases03 medical and health sciencesGene FrequencySensuCrustaceaAnimalsSeawater14. Life underwatereducationAlleles0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyPolymorphism GeneticEcologyFishesGenetic Variationbiology.organism_classificationEuropeIsoenzymesGenetic divergencePhenotypeInfectious DiseasesMysisZoogeographySympatric speciationAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyTaxonomy (biology)Helminthiasis Animal

description

SUMMARYNew biological species and high levels of inter- and intraspecific genetic divergence were discovered in an allozyme study of some North European members of the acanthocephalan genus Echinorhynchus (sensu lato), parasites of fish and malacostracan crustaceans. (i) A strong differentiation between the marine E. gadi and the fresh- and brackish-water E. salmonis (genetic identity I ≃ 0) supports a generic distinction between these taxa; however, the subdivision would not entirely concur with the concepts of Echinorhynchus (sensu stricto) and Metechinorhynchus suggested earlier. (ii) Samples of E. gadi from the Baltic, Norwegian and North Seas included three distinct, partially sympatric biological species (spp. I–III; I ≃ 0·5). (iii) E. bothniensis, previously only known from the northern Baltic Sea, represents a complex of freshwater taxa with an intermediate host relationship to the ‘glacial relict’ Mysis spp. and with a distributional and host analogy to the North American E. leidyi. A population in a northern lake in the Barents Sea basin is closely related to E. bothniensis of the Baltic area, but is probably specifically distinct; the divergence between these populations (I ≃ 0·6) is similar to that between their Mysis host species. (iv) Considerable intraspecific differentiation (Fst = 0·25), probably reflecting post-glacial population bottlenecks, was found between Baltic and nearby lacustrine E. bothniensis, and between Atlantic and Baltic E. gadi sp. I.

https://doi.org/10.1017/s0031182000078574