Genetic differentiation of coregonid fishes in pechora river


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Abstract

A population–genetic study of five coregonid fish species has been carried out using 30 enzyme loci. The species under study included whitefish, a natural hybrid of vendace and least cisco, inconnu, peled, and Arctic cisco. The investigation revealed a low intraspecific genetic differentiation of the abovementioned species from Lower Pechora River and Usa River, which is the main tributary in the Pechora River basin, where coregonid fishes migrate to spawn. Presumably, whitefish, vendace, and inconnu inhabiting the main channels of Lower Pechora and Usa rivers are represented here by introgressive populations of species formed by a mix of discrete evolutionary lineages originating from geographically separated Late Quaternary refugia. Some lineages of whitefish, vendace, and inconnu from the West Siberian periglacial lake came to Eastern Europe together with the last migration wave of Siberian species to the west, including peled, broad whitefish, and Arctic cisco, during the Middle Weichselian glaciation (60000–50000 years ago), while in the Eastern European Periglacial refugium (Lake Komi), local lineages of these species had survived. The periglacial Lake Komi has probably been located on the Pechora Plain since early Weichselian glaciation (90000–80000 years ago), and the studied whitefish specimens from Upper Pechora River are probably the purest descendants of the periglacial race of whitefish from Lake Komi. This assumption is supported by the data on the high level of genetic differentiation between the whitefish of Upper Pechora and Lower Pechora (DN = 0.005), as well as by the pattern of allele distribution in some polymorphic loci. In our opinion, the ecologic and genetic differentiation of vendace in the Pechora River basin is also connected with the interaction between two evolutionary lineages that originated from independent periglacial refugia.

About the authors

D. S. Sendek

National Research Institute of Lake and River Fisheries

Author for correspondence.
Email: sendek@mail.ru
Russian Federation, nab. Makarova 26, St. Petersburg, 199053

A. P. Novoselov

Polar Research Institute of Marine Fisheries and Oceanography, Northern Branch

Email: sendek@mail.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Uritskogo 17, Arkhangelsk, 163002

E. I. Boznak

Syktyvkar State University

Email: sendek@mail.ru
Russian Federation, pr. Oktyabrskii 55, Syktyvkar, 167001

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