Geographic patterns of intra- and interspecific diversity of riverine
fish species in the Italian Northern Apennines and Ligurian Alps
Abstract
Understanding the intricate dynamics of biodiversity within and across
riverine ecosystems, influenced by geological history and environmental
factors, is crucial for effective conservation and management
strategies. Italy, particularly the Ligurian region, harbors diverse
freshwater fish communities and populations shaped by unique geological
and hydrological conditions. Here, we investigated the suitability of
eDNA-metabarcoding to identify inter- and intraspecific diversity
patterns of riverine fish populations along the main drainage divide
(MDD) between the Adriatic and Ligurian basins in Northern Italy. We
collected 96 aquatic eDNA samples across 48 riverine sites, amplified
them using a cytb primer pair and denoised the sequences to retrieve
amplicon sequence variants (ASV). We calculated communities’
phylogenetic distance with betaMPD based on genetic distances derived
from the ASVs, combined them with conductance-based landscape metrics
and applied generalized dissimilarity models (GDM) to assess spatial
genetic structure. Our results reveal genetic differentiation among
populations of several fish species, with some displaying clustering
patterns across the drainage divide and isolation by distance patterns.
Overall, taxon richness was significantly higher in the Ligurian sites
(25) than in the Adriatic side of the MDD (22), as was ASV richness (205
vs. 196). Our findings highlight the effectiveness of eDNA-metabarcoding
in uncovering various facets of diversity, shedding light on hidden
genetic diversity within ASVs, and revealing significant spatial genetic
structuring in freshwater fish populations across multiple species.