Landlocking and genetic differentiation of a common fresh water goby <I>Rhinogobius</I> sp. LD caused by Ishite-gawa Dam in the Shigenobu River system
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- TAKAGI Motohiro
- <I>South Ehime Fisheries Research Center Tarumi branch, Ehime University</I>
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- YANO Satoshi
- <I>Faculty of Agriculture, Ehime University</I>
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- SHIBAKAWA Ryohei
- <I>Faculty of Agriculture, Ehime University</I>
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- SHIMIZU Takaaki
- <I>Ehime Fisheries Research Center</I>
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- OHARA Kenichi
- <I>Gifu Prefectural Research Institute for Freshwater Fish and Aquatic Environments</I>
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- SUMIZAKI Yoshifumi
- <I>Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Ehime University</I>
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- KAWANISHI Ryota
- <I>Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Ehime University</I>
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- INOUE Mikio
- <I>Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Ehime University</I>
Bibliographic Information
- Other Title
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- 愛媛県・重信川水系の石手川ダムにおけるオオヨシノボリの陸封化と遺伝的分化
- エヒメケン シゲノブガワ スイケイ ノ イシテガワ ダム ニ オケル オオヨシノボリ ノ リクフウカ ト イデンテキ ブンカ
- Landlocking and genetic differentiation of a common freshwater goby Rhinogobius sp. LD caused by Ishite-gawa Dam in the Shigenobu River system
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Abstract
Population genetic structure and migratory history of the common freshwater goby Rhinogobius sp. LD in the Shigenobu River system were surveyed by using three microsatellite loci and otolith Sr/Ca ratio, to examine effects of two types of dams, a single dam with a reservoir (Ishite-gawa Dam) and multiple erosion-control dams without reservoir. Genetic variabilities were high in the Shigenobu River populations and the estimated hetero zygosity ranged from 0.843 to 0.889. Considerable genetic differences were observed between populations above Ishite-gawa Dam (two sites) and populations of the other nine sites (above multiple erosion-control dams), within which the genetic heterogeneity was not observed. These results suggested that the populations above Ishite-gawa Dam were landlocked and differentiated genetically by the dam, whereas the goby populations were not isolated by multiple erosion-control dams. This was supported by the otolith Sr/Ca analysis, which indicated that the goby individuals sampled from the sites above the Ishitegawa Dam had not experienced saltwater whereas those above multiple erosion-control dams had experienced. In addition, Sr/Ca analysis suggested that a population just below the Ishitegawa Dam consisted of both landlocked (drifted from the reservoir) and sea-migratory individuals.
Journal
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- Ecology and Civil Engineering
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Ecology and Civil Engineering 14 (1), 35-44, 2011
Ecology and Civil Engineering Society
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Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1390282679448162944
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- NII Article ID
- 10031159815
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- NII Book ID
- AA11528360
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- ISSN
- 18825974
- 13443755
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- NDL BIB ID
- 11213829
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- Text Lang
- ja
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- Data Source
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- JaLC
- NDL
- Crossref
- CiNii Articles
- KAKEN
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- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed