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Genetic variability in the cosmopolitan deep-water ophiuran Ophiomusium lymani

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Abstract

A population of the cosmopolitan deep-sea ophiuran Ophiomusium lymani was studied by gel electrophoresis, and proved to be highly variable genetically; about 53% of the 15 loci studied are polymorphic, and the average individual is heterozygous at about 17% of the loci. This is approximately the same genetic variability displayed by other species, belonging to other phyla or classes, from the same deep-sea trawl. A similarly high level of genetic variation occurs in deep-sea organisms in general, and in a shallow-water tropical species. Both the deep-sea and the tropics are trophically stable environments. On the other hand, low genetic variabilities have been found in marine species from trophically unstable environments. These data suggest that any phylogenetic effects on genetic variability are secondary, and that the trophic regime may be of major importance in determining genetic strategies of adaptation.

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Communicated by O. Kinne, Hamburg

This study is no. 5 of a series of reports on the results of “Expedition Quagmire”.

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Ayala, F.J., Valentine, J.W. Genetic variability in the cosmopolitan deep-water ophiuran Ophiomusium lymani . Mar. Biol. 27, 51–57 (1974). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00394760

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00394760

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