Genetic evidence of the unique identity of the West African Mangrove Oyster (Crassostrea tulipa) from the Gulf of Guinea
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Regional Studies in Marine Science
Abstract
This research enabled the genetic identification of the West African mangrove oysters, Crassostrea tulipa, as well
as establishing the evolutionary relationship between it and other Crassostrea species. Essentially, the study
assisted in clearing up a long-standing confusion over this species’ synonymy with C. gasar. Also, the population
structure of 60 C. tulipa individuals, from three different ecotypes, was analyzed using the mitochondrial cyto chrome oxidase I (COI) genes as a marker. Results provided the first genetic sequences for C. tulipa and deposited
in the GeneBank. Optimal and consensus bootstrap Neighbor-Joining trees distinctively differentiated C. tulipa
from other Crassostrea species and consistently formed a different clade with C. gasar, with no bootstrap value
from either NJ, MPT, or UPG trees supporting their similarity. C. tulipa sequences occurred as different haplo types from other Crassostrea sp, with a mutation value as high as 288 and a haplotype diversity of 0.893 between
C. tulipa and C. gasar sequences. High estimates of genetic distance (1.40–1.55) and patristic divergence were
recorded between C. tulipa and C. gasar, in the same range as with seven other species. The study thus reveals the
unique identity of C. tulipa as genetically distinct from C. gasar and other Crassostrea species. Based on the
population structure analyses from the neutrality test, a low to high haplotype diversity h (0.000–0.963) and low
nucleotide diversity π (0.00–0.378) were obtained. A negative mean Tajima’s D (− 0.65247), and a positive Fu’s
Fs (3.194), suggest rare variations or low-frequency polymorphisms. In addition to serving as the basis for
phylogeny, the identification of C. tulipa and the recent data on its population structure also serve as the basis for
conservation efforts and hatchery-based aquaculture.
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Research Article