Enzyme polymorphism in Antarctic krill (Euphausiacea); genetic variation between populations and species

Abstract
By means of enzyme electrophoretical assays three samples of Euphausia superba, all from the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic Ocean, were examined to see whether or not they represent genetically separated populations. The same samples were also compared with E. superba from off the Western coast of the Antarctic Peninsula, representing the Pacific sector. The latter animals have previously been studied by other authors. One sample of a second species of Antarctic krill, E. crystallorophias, was likewise examined. Thirty-five loci were studied in E. superba, and it is concluded that the three samples from the Atlantic sector most probably do not represent reproductively isolated populations. Their average heterozygosity, about 10%, is however greater than the value previously found for the ‘Pacific’ E. superba, 5.8 %. Calculations of the genetic identity and genetic distance between the Atlantic and ‘Pacific’ samples of E. superba suggest they represent separate populations. The average heterozygosity of E. crystallorophias was estimated to be between 9.1 and 9.4 %, from studies of 33 loci. The genetic distance between this species and E. superba was estimated at 0.989. The results are finally discussed in terms of postulated theories on genetic variability versus environmental heterogeneity.