preliminary genetic data on
some Caribbean Artemia franciscana strains based on RAPD’s
W.N.
Camargo, P. Bossier, P. Sorgeloos, Y. Sun-2002
Hydrobiologia, 468: 245-249
Abstract:
A total of fourteen Artemia samples from Colombia,
Venezuela, Curaçao (Netherlands Antilles), Puerto Rico, and reference
samples from U.S.A. (San Francisco Bay, SFB) belonging to the superspecies
Artemia franciscana, and Argentina (A. persimilis), were analysed with the
RAPD technique in order to demonstrate genetic dissimilarities. Pearson’s
correlation coefficients between the DNA banding patterns were calculated.
They served as input values for the construction of UPGMA dendrograms. The
results indicate that, within the collection of Colombian, Venezuelan and
the two Netherlands Antilles Artemia cyst samples examined, two different
groups seem to exist. Geographically, the mountainous area of Sierra Nevada
de Santa Marta separates these two groups (lower Caribbean to the South and
middle Caribbean to the North). Although the Caribbean, North and South
American populations belong to A. franciscana, genetic discontinuities are
to be expected due to habitat differences and geographic isolation. The
Sierra Nevada (with an altitude of about 5800 m) emerges as the barrier very
likely to explain the observed RAPD differences. Little genetic variability
was present in the Colombian samples from Manaure that were collected almost
every ten years, nor in the samples from Galerazamba collected almost two
decades apart, although these samples were more likely subjected to
different prevailing environmental conditions. The SFB population did not
show a very close relation with all Caribbean populations analysed,
including the Puerto Rican. All A. franciscana populations analysed were
divergent from A. persilimis (Argentina).
(Laboratory of Aquaculture & Artemia Reference
Center, Ghent University, Rozier 44, B-9000 Gent, Belgium, e-mail: wcamargo@hotmail.com)