Back to Search Start Over

Morphological and mitochondrial dna analyses of oysters in the northern bay of bengal, bangladesh

Authors :
Mohammed Shah Nawaz Chowdhury
Loren D. Coen
Sourav S. Joy
Kimberly S. Reece
Aad C. Smaal
Source :
Journal of Shellfish Research 40 (2021) 2, Journal of Shellfish Research, 40(2), 213-229
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The geographic boundaries of many important habitat-building shallow estuarine oyster (Family Ostreidae) species are poorly understood, especially in subtropical and tropical waters. These keystone species often have extensive historical and extant ranges, in part because of their ability to adapt to diverse environmental conditions and the transfer and introduction of a few species worldwide for aquaculture production. In addition, oysters exhibit morphological plasticity additionally confounding species identification and taxonomy. Molecular techniques have led to significant improvements in oyster systematics and taxonomy but have not been applied to oysters from many tropical regions, including the coastal areas of the Indian Ocean such as Bangladesh. Because species' identification based on morphological traits alone, in this case primarily shell characteristics, were inadequate, phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene fragments was also done to confirm the identity of oyster specimens collected from Bangladesh coastal waters. Phylogenetic analyses of collected oyster samples confirmed the two monophyletic subclades of the Ostreidae family Crassostrea and Saccostrea, and five oyster lineages from the region of Bangladesh were identified: Crassostrea gryphoides, Crassostrea belcheri, Saccostrea cuccullata lineage B, S. cuccullata lineage F, and Saccostrea mordax. A new addition to the list of Crassostrea species, C. belcheri was found in Bangladesh, but C. belcheri, C. gryphoides, and S. cuccullata are considered “common” species in the neighboring states of India and Myanmar indicating a widespread distribution of these species along the entire coast of the Bay of Bengal. However, S. mordax, is a new record for the Bay of Bengal region including the coastal waters of Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and thus extends the geographical distribution of this species.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07308000
Volume :
40
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Shellfish Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cfa443e12b2a12bb128ae77dad8af78f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2983/035.040.0203