As. Comesana et A. Sanjuan, MICROGEOGRAPHIC ALLOZYME DIFFERENTIATION IN THE HYBRID ZONE OF MYTILUS-GALLOPROVINCIALIS LMK AND MYTILUS-EDULIS L ON THE CONTINENTAL EUROPEAN COAST, Helgolander Meeresuntersuchungen, 51(1), 1997, pp. 107-124
The European Mytilus galloprovincialis Lmk. and M. edulis L. coexist a
nd hybridize in different proportions in extended areas of the British
and Atlantic French coasts. M. galloprovincialis typical allozymes se
em to predominate in wave exposed areas, at high levels of attachment
and in larger mussels in the British hybrid zone. Mussel samples from
exposed and sheltered areas, 200 m apart, and from high and low levels
of attachment were collected from a location of the French hybrid zon
e in 1988-92. Pure M. galloprovincialis and M. edulis populations were
also taken as controls. Diagnostic enzyme loci for both Mytilus (EST-
D, LAP-1*, MPI*, ODH*) and AP-1*, LAP-2* and PGM* loci were studied.
The frequencies of the M. galloprovincialis typical alleles were signi
ficantly greater in exposed populations than in sheltered samples (e.g
. 0.729 to 0.803 vs 0.192 to 0.581 for EST-D90), and at high level of
attachment than at low level for the sheltered area (e.g. 0.581 vs 0.
192 for EST-D90). Putative M. galloprovincialis was more abundant on
the exposed coast (0.591 and 0.702) than on the sheltered shore, where
it predominated at the high shore but not at the low shore location (
0.371 vs 0.045). Significantly positive correlations between shell len
gth and typical M. galloprovincialis compound allele frequencies were
found only for populations from exposed areas. Relationships between t
he Mytilus genetic differentiation and ecological factors are discusse
d.