Genetic diversity of the giant tiger shrimp (Penaeus monodon) collected from 5 areas, Chumphon and Trat (Gulf of Thailand), and Phangnga, Satun, and Trang (Andaman Sea), was examined by randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) and mitochondrial DNA (16S ribosomal DNA and an intergenic COI-COII) polymorphism. A total of 53 polymorphic fragments from UBC299, UBC273, and UBC268 was consistently scored across all samples. From the respective primers 26, 32, and 30 genotypes were generated. A 260-bp RAPD fragment generated by the primer UBC268 was specifically observed in 95.8% of Trat P. monodon, suggesting that this RAPD could be used as a marker for comparing phenotypic performance of P. monodon from Trat and other geographic samples. In addition, 37 mtDNA composite haplotypes were observed from restriction analysis of the same P. monodon samples. High haplotype diversity (0.855) and nucleotide diversity (3.328%) of Thai P. monodon were observed. Population differentiation of P. monodon between the Andaman Sea and Gulf of Thailand was clearly illustrated by both techniques (P <.0001). Nevertheless, contradictory results on patterns of differentiation were observed between P. monodon within the Gulf of Thailand. Analysis of nuclear DNA polymorphism (RAPD) indicated a genetically significant difference between Chumphon and Trat ( P <.0001), whereas mtDNA polymorphism did not show differentiation between these samples (P =.0497). Under the presumption of selective neutrality of these markers, biased female gene flow between Trat and Chumphon P. monodon may exist and be responsible for an anomalous differentiation pattern between these geographic samples.
Genetic diversity of abalone in Thailand, Haliotis asinina, H. ovina, and H. varia, was analyzed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of 18S and 16S rDNAs, with randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP). Species-specific RAPD markers were found in each abalone species. Restriction analysis of 18S (nuclear) ribosomal DNA with Alu I, Taq I, and Hae III and 16S (mitochondrial) rDNA with Bam HI, Eco RI, Hae III, and Alu I gave 12 and 13 digestion patterns, respectively. A total of 49 composite haplotypes were found. A dendogram obtained by the unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic mean, constructed from divergence between pairs of composite haplotypes, revealed reproductively isolated gene pools of these abalone and indicated that H. asinina and H. ovina are genetically closer than H. varia. When H. varia was discovered owing to small sample sizes, geographic heterogeneity analysis and FST estimate indicated clear genetic differentiation between H. ovina originating from the Andaman Sea (west) and the Gulf of Thailand (east, P<0.0001), whereas partial differentiation was observed between the Philippines and the remaining H. asinina samples (P<0.0021). The amplified 16S rDNAs of individuals representing composite haplotypes found in this study were cloned and sequenced. A neighbor-joining tree constructed from sequence divergence of 16S rDNA accurately allocated those sequences according to species origins of abalone. Species-specific PCR based on 16S rDNA polymorphism was successfully developed in H. asinina and H. varia but not in H. ovina.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.