The short-finned eel Anguilla bicolor is known to be subdivided in two distinct subspecies (i.e. A. bicolor bicolor and A. bicolor pacifica), each subspecies being geographically distributed in allopatry. The present survey intends to describe genetic differentiation, population structure, molecular variance and phylogeny of both subspecies of A. bicolor in Indonesian waters. The genotypes of seven microsatellite locus and sequences of the entire cytochrome b were analyzed on 180 specimens collected in 10 representative locations, where one of the two subspecies spend their freshwater life. The results showed high heterozygosity (0.767 < He < 0.891). Significant deviation from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium were essentially detected on AjTR04 and Aro63 loci. No diagnostic microsatellite loci was observed between the subspecies which shared most of their alleles. Genetic Reynolds distances computed for each population ranged
between 0.029 and 0.073 among A. bicolor pacifica populations, between 0.045 and 0.149 among A. bicolor bicolor populations and between 0.042 and 0.114 among populations of different subspecies. Both the mitochondrial and the microsatellite markers confirm the subdivision into two subspecies while microsatellite loci suggest a moderate differentiation between subspecies.