Presentation at the 1st Chilean Congress of Zoology
Talk, 1st Chilean Congress of Zoology, Talca, Chile
Jorge Alejandro Cortés Miranda
Talk, 1st Chilean Congress of Zoology, Talca, Chile
Jorge Alejandro Cortés Miranda
Talk, Joint Annual Meeting GENEVOL 2023 (Genetics Society of Chile & Evolutionary Society of Chile), Talca, Chile
Symposium: “Integrating genomics with other disciplines in the study of evolutionary processes”
Congreso, LVI Reunión Anual de la Sociedad de Genética de Chile (SOCHIGEN) XV Reunión Anual de la Sociedad Chilena de Evolución (SOCEVOL), Talca, Chile
Talk, XXIX Reuniión de la Sociedad de Ecología de Chile, Santiago, Chile
María Paz Briones Alburquenque, Jorge Cortes Miranda, Caren Vega-Retter
Conference, I Latin American Congress of Evolution, Online
Conference, XVIII Latin American Congress of Genetics, Online
Talk, XII Chilean Congress of Ornithology (CCO 2017), Santa Cruz, Chile
FRANCISCO E. FONTÚRBEL, DANIELA A. SALAZAR, JORGE CORTÉS-MIRANDA AND CAREN VEGA-RETTER
Congreso, Chilean Limnology Society, Puerto Montt, Chile
Human activities, especially since the industrial revolution, have caused major alterations to the environment, producing diverse effects on natural populations. For example, changes and fragmentation of freshwater flows, which in turn produces changes in the genetic diversity of populations, observing in many cases a decrease in this, which increases the probability of extinction of the population in the short term and in the long term decreases its capacity for evolutionary adaptation. In Chile, one of the basins most intervened by humans is the Maipo River basin. Previous studies carried out in the basin determined the population structuring of the silverside endemic to Chile Basilichthys microlepidotus. Recently a new group of silversides was detected in the Laguna Esmeralda, Melipilla (33°38´50”S, 71°16´0”W), a body of water that was created artificially in 1992 as an indirect action of the construction of the Autopista del Sol. The objective of this work was to characterize the new group of silversides found in the Laguna Esmeralda, determining its genetic diversity, allelic richness and number of alleles and if they constitute or not a new population with respect to those already characterized previously. For this, 8 microsatellite markers were used, which showed that the group inhabiting the Laguna Esmeralda corresponds to an independent population and that it presents the lowest or one of the lowest values of genetic diversity, allelic richness and number of alleles compared to the other five populations of the basin. These results suggest a possible founder effect in the population of silversides inhabiting the Laguna Esmeralda.
Talk, 28th International Congress for Conservation Biology (ICCB 2017), Cartagena, Colombia
Francisco Fonturbel, Jorge Cortés, Daniela Salazar, Caren Vega-Retter