. . "3"^^ . "14310" . . . . "The microsatellite variability and parasitism in native and introduced populations of four Neogobius species (Gobiidae)"@en . "RIV/00216224:14310/08:00042183!RIV11-MSM-14310___" . . "379321" . "Ondra\u010Dkov\u00E1, Mark\u00E9ta" . . "The microsatellite variability and parasitism in native and introduced populations of four Neogobius species (Gobiidae)" . "3"^^ . "microsatellite; Neogobius; parasitism"@en . "The microsatellite variability and parasitism in native and introduced populations of four Neogobius species (Gobiidae)"@en . "[EDCDC4134472]" . . . . . . "Four Ponto\u2013Caspian goby fish are regarded as invasive because of their ability to establish abundant populations in non\u2013native areas. Native populations of all species collected from Bulgarian section of the Danube River, non-native populations of N. kessleri and N. melanostomus from Austrian section of the Danube River and non-native populations of N. fluviatilis and N. gymnotrachelus from Vistula River, Poland, were examined for parasite infection and 15 polymorphic microsatellite loci. The low level of polymorphism of microsatellite loci was observed in the introduced populations of N. fluviatilis and N. gymnotrachelus comparing to the native populations, which could be explained as the consequences of invasive strategy and founder effect. The gene diversity was similar in native and introduced populations of N. kessleri and N. melanostomus. Parasitological examination revealed that introduced N. fluviatilis and N."@en . "Vete\u0161n\u00EDkov\u00E1 \u0160imkov\u00E1, Andrea" . . . . . "Four Ponto\u2013Caspian goby fish are regarded as invasive because of their ability to establish abundant populations in non\u2013native areas. Native populations of all species collected from Bulgarian section of the Danube River, non-native populations of N. kessleri and N. melanostomus from Austrian section of the Danube River and non-native populations of N. fluviatilis and N. gymnotrachelus from Vistula River, Poland, were examined for parasite infection and 15 polymorphic microsatellite loci. The low level of polymorphism of microsatellite loci was observed in the introduced populations of N. fluviatilis and N. gymnotrachelus comparing to the native populations, which could be explained as the consequences of invasive strategy and founder effect. The gene diversity was similar in native and introduced populations of N. kessleri and N. melanostomus. Parasitological examination revealed that introduced N. fluviatilis and N." . . . "The microsatellite variability and parasitism in native and introduced populations of four Neogobius species (Gobiidae)" . "P(LC522), Z(MSM0021622416)" . "Vysko\u010Dilov\u00E1, Martina" . . "RIV/00216224:14310/08:00042183" .