S. Planes, GENETIC DIFFERENTIATION IN RELATION TO RESTRICTED LARVAL DISPERSAL OFTHE CONVICT SURGEONFISH ACANTHURUS-TRIOSTEGUS IN FRENCH-POLYNESIA, Marine ecology. Progress series, 98(3), 1993, pp. 237-246
Genetic markers were used to study larval dispersal in coral reef fish
es in order to investigate the impact of migration during the pelagic
phase on island recruitment. Samples of Acanthurus triostegus were col
lected from 11 sites in French Polynesia in order to examine 3 differe
nt spatial scales (Island, Archipelago and Polynesia). To examine the
effects of gene flow on population heterogeneity and population substr
ucturing in A. triostegus, starch gel electrophoresis on 1 0 polymorph
ic loci encoding 10 enzymes was used [heterozygoty (H) = 0.325 +/- 0.0
45; polymorphism level (P0.95) = 0.3231. Nei's genetic distances calcu
lated on the 10 polymorphic loci were very high (between 0.004 and 0.1
94 with an average of 0.058) and G-tests made on a single locus betwee
n pairwise samples showed 5 groups to be significantly different: 1 gr
oup comprised samples from Tiahura, Tubuai, Maiao, Tetiaroa, Pt. Paroa
and Tahiti; 1 group comprised samples from Muroroa and Managreva and
3 other groups comprised the isolated samples from Takapoto, Bora-Bora
and Nuku-Hiva respectively. Fixation index (F(st)) values indicate si
gnificant differentiation between the 11 samples (F(st) = 0.0886 on 11
populations), even between Bora-Bora and Moorea which are separated b
y 250 km. Estimates of gene flow (N(e)m: absolute numer of migrants at
equilibrium), assuming equilibrium between the samples, were less-tha
n-or-equal-to 10 individuals per generation, which is sufficient to en
sure that the same alleles will be shared over long periods, but not s
ufficient to maintain identical allelic frequencies between population
s. A hypothesis is proposed to illustrate the genetic structure of A.
triostegus observed in French Polynesia based on ocean currents and th
e behaviour of the larval oceanic phase.