Abstract:
Experimental examination of reproductive isolation is the first step in understanding hybridization processes. Here, we studied preferential fertilization between 2 cupped oyster taxa, Crassostrea angulata and Crassostrea gigas, as a potential prezygotic reproductive isolation. Early examination of sperm competition is now possible by molecular analysis of oyster embryos. This avoids the confounding effect of differential mortality during the larval stage. Six hundred embryos were sampled from 2 crosses. Three microsatellite loci were enough to determine without ambiguity the taxa of contributing sires of embryos. No evidence of preferential fertilization between gametes from the same taxa was shown. A significantly higher contribution of the C. gigas males was revealed with the C. angulata females, but not with the C. gigas females, which might suggest early heterosis or interaction differences between gametes. In the light of these results, natural hybridization between both taxa can be expected in cases of their geographical coexistence, as in the Southern European populations in which both taxa are in contact as a result of aquaculture development.
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Received May 6, 2000; accepted March 6, 2001.
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Huvet, A., Balabaud, K., Bierne, N. et al. Microsatellite Analysis of 6-Hour-Old Embryos Reveals No Preferential Intraspecific Fertilization Between Cupped Oysters Crassostrea gigas and Crassostrea angulata . Mar. Biotechnol. 3, 448–453 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10126-001-0017-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10126-001-0017-2