The New Zealand black-foot abalone, Haliotis iris, or pāua, is endemic to the rocky reefs surrounding New Zealand, whose main land mass spans 13° of latitude and separates the Tasman Sea from the Pacific Ocean. In this study, we examined the population genetic structure of this important commercial, cultural and recreational species by genotyping nine microsatellite loci in 485 pāua from 27 locations distributed across mainland New Zealand and the Chatham Islands. We found low, but significant, levels of genetic differentiation. Key genetic breaks were identified among the Chatham Islands and mainland samples; patterns that are strongly corroborated by prior work employing mtDNA sequences. AMOVAs indicated that samples from the south of the...
<div><p>Small abalone (<i>Haliotis diversicolor</i>) is a commercially valuable species for both fis...
Over the past two decades, the South African abalone (Haliotis midae), has been under serious threat...
Understanding the distribution of genetic diversity in exploited species is fundamental to successfu...
The New Zealand black-foot abalone, Haliotis iris, or pāua, is endemic to the rocky reefs surroundin...
Abalone (Haliotis spp.) are marine broadcast spawners that inhabit temperate and tropical waters acr...
The scale over which populations exchange individuals (migration) is central to ecology, and importa...
The Haliotidae is a family of marine gastropod molluscs, of the Order Archaeogastropoda (Schremp 19...
Estimating contemporary genetic structure and population connectivity in marine species is challengi...
Populations of broadcast spawning marine organisms often have large sizes and are exposed to reduced...
Hierarchical sampling and subsequent microsatellite genotyping of >2,300 Haliotis laevigata (greenli...
Estimating contemporary genetic structure and population connectivity in marine species is challengi...
The genetic composition of greenlip abalone (Haliotis laevigata) from Point Cook in Port Phillip Bay...
Over the past two decades, the South African abalone (Haliotis midae), has been under serious threat...
Characterising adaptive genetic divergence among conspecific populations is often achieved by studyi...
How early stages of speciation in free-spawning marine invertebrates proceed is poorly understood. T...
<div><p>Small abalone (<i>Haliotis diversicolor</i>) is a commercially valuable species for both fis...
Over the past two decades, the South African abalone (Haliotis midae), has been under serious threat...
Understanding the distribution of genetic diversity in exploited species is fundamental to successfu...
The New Zealand black-foot abalone, Haliotis iris, or pāua, is endemic to the rocky reefs surroundin...
Abalone (Haliotis spp.) are marine broadcast spawners that inhabit temperate and tropical waters acr...
The scale over which populations exchange individuals (migration) is central to ecology, and importa...
The Haliotidae is a family of marine gastropod molluscs, of the Order Archaeogastropoda (Schremp 19...
Estimating contemporary genetic structure and population connectivity in marine species is challengi...
Populations of broadcast spawning marine organisms often have large sizes and are exposed to reduced...
Hierarchical sampling and subsequent microsatellite genotyping of >2,300 Haliotis laevigata (greenli...
Estimating contemporary genetic structure and population connectivity in marine species is challengi...
The genetic composition of greenlip abalone (Haliotis laevigata) from Point Cook in Port Phillip Bay...
Over the past two decades, the South African abalone (Haliotis midae), has been under serious threat...
Characterising adaptive genetic divergence among conspecific populations is often achieved by studyi...
How early stages of speciation in free-spawning marine invertebrates proceed is poorly understood. T...
<div><p>Small abalone (<i>Haliotis diversicolor</i>) is a commercially valuable species for both fis...
Over the past two decades, the South African abalone (Haliotis midae), has been under serious threat...
Understanding the distribution of genetic diversity in exploited species is fundamental to successfu...