Assessment of connectivity patterns of the marbled crab Pachygrapsus marmoratus in the Adriatic and Ionian seas through combination of genetic data and Lagrangian simulations
Seascape connectivity studies, informing the level of exchange of individuals between populations, can provide extremely valuable data for marine population biology and conservation strategy definition. Here we used a multidisciplinary approach to investigate the connectivity of the marbled crab (Pa...
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Zusammenfassung: | Seascape connectivity studies, informing the level of exchange of
individuals between populations, can provide extremely valuable data for
marine population biology and conservation strategy definition. Here we
used a multidisciplinary approach to investigate the connectivity of the
marbled crab (Pachygrapsus marmoratus), a high dispersal species, in the
Adriatic and Ionian basins. A combination of genetic analyses (based on 15
microsatellites screened in 314 specimens), Lagrangian simulations
(obtained with a biophysical model of larval dispersal) and
individual-based forward-time simulations (incorporating species-specific
fecundity and a wide range of population sizes) disclosed the realized and
potential connectivity among eight different locations, including existing
or planned Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). Overall, data indicated a
general genetic homogeneity, after removing a single outlier locus
potentially under directional selection. Lagrangian simulations showed
that direct connections potentially exist between several sites, but most
sites did not exchange larvae. Forward-time simulations indicated that a
few generations of drift would produce detectable genetic differentiation
in case of complete isolation as well as when considering the direct
connections predicted by Lagrangian simulations.Overall, our results
suggest that the observed genetic homogeneity reflects a high level of
realized connectivity among sites, which might result from a regional
metapopulation dynamics, rather than from direct exchange among
populations of the existing or planned MPAs. Thus, in the Adriatic and
Ionian basins, connectivity might be critically dependent on unsampled,
unprotected, populations, even in species with very high dispersal
potential like the marbled crab. Our study pointed out the pitfalls of
using wide-dispersing species with broad habitat availability when
assessing genetic connectivity among MPAs or areas deserving protection
and prompts for the careful consideration of appropriate dispersing
features, habitat suitability, reproductive timing and duration in the
selection of informative species. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.brv15dvc4 |