Eric A. Lynn
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
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Featured researches published by Eric A. Lynn.
Molecular Ecology | 2008
J. R. Hyde; Carol A. Kimbrell; J. E. Budrick; Eric A. Lynn; Russell D. Vetter
A recent phylogenetic review of the genus Sebastes suggested the existence of a cryptic species of vermilion rockfish (Sebastes miniatus). To evaluate the geographical and bathymetric range of the Type 1 and Type 2 forms reported in that study, cytochrome b sequences were examined from 548 fish. Type 1 fish were found primarily south of Point Conception on reefs deeper than 100 m. Type 2 fish were common range‐wide at sites shallower than 100 m. Reproductive isolation between the two types was tested using nine microsatellite loci. Estimates of genetic divergence were made using the fixation index (FST) and correspondence between haplotype and genotype was tested by Bayesian population assignment and multivariate plotting of individual genotypes. Microsatellite analyses gave strong support for the presence of two distinct groups of genotypes. All fish with Type 1 haplotypes and fish with Type 2 haplotypes from < 100 m depth had genotypes unique to their haplotype group. However, most (68%) fish with Type 2 haplotypes from > 100 m depth assigned strongly to the Type 1 genotype group. Morphometric comparisons between the two genotypic groups revealed significant differences at three of the six examined measurements. Differences in both genetics, depth of occurrence, and morphology suggest these are separate species. This observation along with evidence of depth segregation in many recent species pairs led us to hypothesize a speciation model for Sebastes spp. by which the loss or truncation of a depth‐related ontogenetic migration can lead to the creation of reproductively isolated populations.
Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2003
Howard I. Browman; Russell D. Vetter; Carolina Alonso Rodriguez; John J. Cullen; Richard F. Davis; Eric A. Lynn; Jean-François St. Pierre
Abstract In previous work, we evaluated the effects of ultraviolet (UV = 280–400 nm) radiation on the early life stages of a planktonic Calanoid copepod (Calanus finmarchicus Gunnerus) and of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua). Both are key species in North Atlantic food webs. To further describe the potential impacts of UV exposure on the early life stages of these two species, we measured the wavelength-specific DNA damage (cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer [CPD] formation per megabase of DNA) induced under controlled experimental exposure to UV radiation. UV-induced DNA damage in C. finmarchicus and cod eggs was highest in the UV-B exposure treatments. Under the same spectral exposures, CPD loads in C. finmarchicus eggs were higher than those in cod eggs, and for both C. finmarchicus and cod embryos, CPD loads were generally lower in eggs than in larvae. Biological weighting functions (BWF) and exposure response curves that explain most of the variability in CPD production were derived from these data. Comparison of the BWF revealed significant differences in sensitivity to UV-B: C. finmarchicus is more sensitive than cod, and larvae are more sensitive than eggs. This is consistent with the raw CPD values. Shapes of the BWF were similar to each other and to a quantitative action spectrum for damage to T7 bacteriophage DNA that is unshielded by cellular material. The strong similarities in the shapes of the weighting functions are not consistent with photoprotection by UV-absorbing compounds, which would generate features in BWF corresponding to absorption bands. The BWF reported in this study were applied to assess the mortality that would result from accumulation of a given CPD load: for both C. finmarchicus and cod eggs, an increased load of 10 CPD Mb−1 of DNA due to UV exposure would result in approximately 10% mortality.
Journal of Heredity | 2012
Vincent P. Buonaccorsi; Carol A. Kimbrell; Eric A. Lynn; John R. Hyde
Comparative population genetic analyses of traditional and emergent molecular markers aid in determining appropriate use of new technologies. The bocaccio rockfish Sebastes paucispinis is a high gene-flow marine species off the west coast of North America that experienced strong population decline over the past 3 decades. We used 18 anonymous and 13 gene-associated simple sequence repeat (SSR) loci (expressed sequence tag [EST]-SSRs) to characterize range-wide population structure with temporal replicates. No F(ST)-outliers were detected using the LOSITAN program, suggesting that neither balancing nor divergent selection affected the loci surveyed. Consistent hierarchical structuring of populations by geography or year class was not detected regardless of marker class. The EST-SSRs were less variable than the anonymous SSRs, but no correlation between F(ST) and variation or marker class was observed. General linear model analysis showed that low EST-SSR variation was attributable to low mean repeat number. Comparative genomic analysis with Gasterosteus aculeatus, Takifugu rubripes, and Oryzias latipes showed consistently lower repeat number in EST-SSRs than SSR loci that were not in ESTs. Purifying selection likely imposed functional constraints on EST-SSRs resulting in low repeat numbers that affected diversity estimates but did not affect the observed pattern of population structure.
Conservation Genetics Resources | 2011
Vincent P. Buonaccorsi; Ashton Bunce; Carol A. Kimbrell; Eric A. Lynn; John R. Hyde
The bocaccio rockfish has historically supported an important fishery on the west coast of North America, and experienced a severe population collapse in the past several decades. Here we report development of 13 EST-SSR PCR primer pairs developed from previously published Sebastes EST databases. All loci are involved in metabolic processes. Diversity in a collection of bocaccio rockfish from off central California ranged from 2 to 17 alleles, with heterozygosities of 0.24–0.92. The loci will be informative in further resolving stock structure issues and possible local adaptation along the species’ broad latitudinal range.
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences | 2002
Vincent P. Buonaccorsi; Carol A. Kimbrell; Eric A. Lynn; Russell D. Vetter
Conservation Genetics | 2005
Vincent P. Buonaccorsi; Carol A. Kimbrell; Eric A. Lynn; Russell D. Vetter
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 1997
Russell D. Vetter; Eric A. Lynn
Archive | 1990
John R. Hunter; John L. Butler; Carol A. Kimbrell; Eric A. Lynn
Molecular Ecology Notes | 2005
M. E. Westerman; V. P. Buonaccorsi; J. A. Stannard; L. Galver; C. Taylor; Eric A. Lynn; C. A. Kimbrell; Russell D. Vetter
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2008
John R. Hyde; Carol A. Kimbrell; Larry Robertson; Kevin Clifford; Eric A. Lynn; Russell D. Vetter