The meagre Argyrosomus regius is a large Sciaenid fish known to
reproduce in the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea in just five distinct and
restricted geographic areas: along the Mauritanian coast and at estuary openings (Gironde,
Tagus, Guadalquivir and Nile). The biological traits of A. regius (high
dispersal capabilities, high fecundity, long larval phase, overlapping generations,
reproduction until 40 years of age) are, in principle, favourable to high gene flow, which
should lead to genetic homogeneity over large geographic scales. Nevertheless, the high
geographic distances between the few reproductive areas leads one ask whether there is
genetic differentiation in this species. In the present study, the genetic differentiation
of the wild A. regius was investigated across most of its natural range
from the Atlantic Ocean (France, Portugal, Spain, Mauritania) to the Mediterranean Sea
(Egypt, Turkey), using 11 microsatellite markers previously identified in another
Sciaenid, the red drum Sciaenops ocellatus. At least two very distinct
groups could be identified, separated by the Gibraltar Strait. Genetic divergences
(FST values) were intermediate between the Atlantic samples
(0.012–0.041), high between Egypt and the Atlantic (0.06–0.107) or Aegean Sea (0.081) and
extremely high between the Aegean Sea and the Atlantic (0.098–0.168). A. regius
exhibited a very high level of genetic differentiation rarely reported in marine
fishes. These results also demonstrate the existence of a sixth independent spawning area
in the Menderes delta (Turkey). Factors potentially involved in this very high genetic
fragmentation are discussed, including physical barriers, glaciation pulses and biological
traits.