Skip to main content
State University of New York at Oswego
myOswegoDL Home
Penfield Library
|
OswegoDL Home
How did Rainbow Smelt invade the Great Lakes? - Testing Bergstedt’s 1983 multiple introduction hypothesis and it’s poten..
Item menu
Print
Send
Add
Share
Description
Standard View
MARC View
Metadata
Usage Statistics
PDF
Downloads
STANDARD VIEW
MARC VIEW
METADATA
USAGE STATISTICS
Open-NJ Link:
https://digitallibrary.oswego.edu/AA00000250/00001
Material Information
Title:
How did Rainbow Smelt invade the Great Lakes? - Testing Bergstedt’s 1983 multiple introduction hypothesis and it’s potential role in rapid adaptation
Notes
Abstract:
Some invasive species rapidly adapt to novel environments despite the associated founder effects during the initial colonization phase. Such adaptation is possible if sufficient genetic variation is generated (e.g., via multiple introductions). In the Great Lakes, Rainbow Smelt (Osmerus mordax) originally invaded Lake Michigan following unintended migration from a stocked population in Crystal Lake. The remaining Great Lakes were subsequently colonized in a relatively sequential order; however, Lake Ontario may have been established by an anadromous strain originally stocked into the Finger Lakes. This invasion provides a natural experiment to test if multiple introductions occurred and if so, to investigate the potential evolution of different ecotypes. Here, we genotyped Rainbow Smelt from Lake Superior (n=18), Lake Michigan (n=24), Lake Huron (n=21), Lake Erie (n=24), and Lake Ontario (n=43) at 13,486 loci. Preliminary results suggest that both Lake Erie and Lake Ontario were from a second, independent introduction given that pairwise Fst estimates to the three remaining Great Lakes ranged 0.05 to 0.06. Future work will focus on identifying outlier loci to better characterize hybridization between the two introductions.
Acquisition:
Collected for SUNY Oswego Institutional Repository by the online self-submittal tool. Submitted by Nicholas Sard.
Record Information
Source Institution:
SUNY Oswego Institutional Repository
Holding Location:
SUNY Oswego Institution
Rights Management:
All applicable rights reserved by the source institution and holding location.
OswegoDL Membership
Aggregations:
SUNY Oswego Historical Materials
SUNY Oswego Scholarly and Creative Works
Added automatically