The yellowfin tuna, Thunnus albacares (Bonnaterre, 1788), covers majority of the Philippines’ tuna catch, one of the major fisheries commodities in the country. Due to its high economic importance sustainable management of these tunas has become an imperative measure to prevent stock depletion. Currently, the Philippine yellowfin tuna is believed to be part of a single stock of the greater WCPO though some reports suggest otherwise. This study therefore aims to establish the genetic stock structure of the said species in the Philippines as compared to Bismarck Sea, Papua New Guinea using nine (9) DNA microsatellite markers.DNA microsatellite data revealed significant genetic differentiation between the Philippine and Bismarck Sea, Papua New Guinea yellowfin tuna samples. (FST = 0.034, P = 0.016), which is further supported by multilocus distance matrix testing (PCoA) and model-based clustering (STRUCTURE 2.2).With these findings, this study posits that the yellowfin tuna population in the Philippines is a separate stock from the Bismarck Sea population. These findings add evidence to the alternative hypothesis of having at least 2 subpopulations of yellowfin tuna in the WCPO and calls for additional scientific studies using other parameters to investigate this. Accurate population information is necessary in formulating a more appropriate management strategy for the sustainability of the yellowfin tuna not only in the Philippines but also in the WCPO.
Codium fragile subsp. fragile (Suringar) Hariot is a large, dichotomously branched green alga that has invaded many temperate locations around the globe. Despite its wide distribution and pest status, there are few accounts of Codium fragile subsp. fragile that provide morphological descriptions, including illustrations, for comparison. In 2008, a seaweed sample suspected to be Codium fragile subsp. fragile was collected from Albany, Western Australia. As this taxon superficially resembles other local erect and dichotomously branching Codium species, a detailed morphological and molecular analysis of the suspect alga was conducted. Investigations confirmed the identity of this alga as the invasive subspecies Codium fragile subsp. fragile. This represents the first record of this species in Western Australia.
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