2012
DOI: 10.1111/mec.12044
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Waterscape genetics of the yellow perch (Perca flavescens): patterns across large connected ecosystems and isolated relict populations

Abstract: Comparisons of a species' genetic diversity and divergence patterns across large connected populations vs. isolated relict areas provide important data for understanding potential response to global warming, habitat alterations and other perturbations. Aquatic taxa offer ideal case studies for interpreting these patterns, because their dispersal and gene flow often are constrained through narrow connectivity channels that have changed over geological time and/or from contemporary anthropogenic perturbations. O… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(42 citation statements)
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References 151 publications
(270 reference statements)
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“…As predicted, we did find that the populations closest to Alaska, thus nearest to the Beringian refugium, exhibited the highest genetic diversity and that there was a significant negative relationship between genetic diversity and fluvial distance from the Alaskan-Yukon border. In theory (e.g., Bernatchez and Wilson 1998), and as demonstrated in numerous empirical examples (Shafer et al 2010;Sepulveda-Villet and Stepien 2012), genetic diversity should be highest in populations currently inhabiting regions not impacted by glacial events. Furthermore, decreases in genetic diversity should be associated with increasing distance from glacial refugia (e.g., Muller et al 2008;Harris and Taylor 2010).…”
Section: Influences On Genetic Variationmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…As predicted, we did find that the populations closest to Alaska, thus nearest to the Beringian refugium, exhibited the highest genetic diversity and that there was a significant negative relationship between genetic diversity and fluvial distance from the Alaskan-Yukon border. In theory (e.g., Bernatchez and Wilson 1998), and as demonstrated in numerous empirical examples (Shafer et al 2010;Sepulveda-Villet and Stepien 2012), genetic diversity should be highest in populations currently inhabiting regions not impacted by glacial events. Furthermore, decreases in genetic diversity should be associated with increasing distance from glacial refugia (e.g., Muller et al 2008;Harris and Taylor 2010).…”
Section: Influences On Genetic Variationmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Yellow perch reside in both Lake Michigan and connecting drowned river mouths (DRMs; Janetski, Ruetz, Bhagat, & Clapp, 2013). We know that yellow perch exhibit genetic structure at large, geographic scales corresponding to recolonization of most of the Great Lakes from the Mississippian refugium and eastern lakes from the Atlantic refugium (Sepulveda-Villet & Stepien, 2012). Recreational harvest of yellow perch in Lake Michigan and DRMs was managed as distinct units with lower limits in Lake Michigan (35 fish/day) than most DRMs (50 fish/day; MDNR, 2016), although a statewide harvest limit of 25 fish/day was enacted during the 2019 fishing season.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lake George currently occupies a basin that previously drained into the Hudson River in the southern basin and into Lake Champlain from the Northern basin until the last ice age scoured and deposited material to form one Lake that flows to the North. A population genetic study by SepuvedaVillet and Stepein [35] indicates separate haplotypes for Lake Champlain and the Hudson River. Since Lake George is on the edge of these two watersheds and there are distinct growth, populations and feeding differences amongst the fish within the Lake, it is possible that Lake George represents a location with both haplotypes or a mixture of the two.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yellow perch have demonstrated subtle but distinct genetic drift across Northern temperate lakes related to the refugia they inhabited during glacial advances and retreats [35]. Lake George currently occupies a basin that previously drained into the Hudson River in the southern basin and into Lake Champlain from the Northern basin until the last ice age scoured and deposited material to form one Lake that flows to the North.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%