FIRST ANALYSIS OF GENETIC VARIABILITY IN CARINTHIAN POPULATIONS OF THE WHITE-CLAWED CRAYFISH AUSTROPOTAMOBIUS PALLIPES
Several authors have speculated about the nativeness of the white-clawed crayfish
(Austropotamobius pallipes) in the Austrian province of Carinthia, since this is the only
occurrence of the species within the Danube river system. Phylogeographic analyses
based on mitochondrial DNA sequences showed that Carinthian A. pallipes are closely
related to specimens from Slovenia, Croatia and north-eastern Italy. These analyses
additionally pointed to an absence of variability among populations in Carinthia. In the
present study a larger number of individuals sampled from three different brooks in
western Carinthia was investigated by analysing sequences of the mtDNA cytochrome c
oxidase gene (COI), microsatellite DNA and microsatellite length variation in the nuclear
ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer region (ITS1). Not only COI sequences revealed
low degrees of genetic variability, but also microsatellite loci displayed low allelic diversity
and low heterozygosity. Analysis of ITS1 microsatellite length variation in turn showed high
levels of intragenomic variability, since single individuals manifested up to seven distinct
fragments. Microsatellite data and ITS1 microsatellite length variation analyses also
revealed significant differentiation among some population pairs. Since genetic divergence
was mainly based on differences in allele frequencies and not on the occurrence of
alternative alleles, we assume that Carinthian populations became isolated rather recently
and that the occurrence of this species in this region is more likely to be a result of human
introduction than of natural postglacial colonisation.
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