Population structure and phylogeography of two North Atlantic Littorina species with contrasting larval development
Phylogeography provides insights into how historical and contemporary processes influence the genetic structure and gene flow in marine organisms around the globe. In benthic marine invertebrates, a species’ reproductive strategy can strongly impact phylogeographic patterns and distribution, with so...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Marine biology 2021-07, Vol.168 (7), Article 117 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Phylogeography provides insights into how historical and contemporary processes influence the genetic structure and gene flow in marine organisms around the globe. In benthic marine invertebrates, a species’ reproductive strategy can strongly impact phylogeographic patterns and distribution, with some direct-developing (non-planktonic) dispersers demonstrating strong genetic structure but also broad geographic spread. While seemingly paradoxical, past work has shown ovoviviparous species, like
Littorina saxatilis
, can be more successful colonizers of remote locations than species with planktonic larvae, like
L. littorea
. Both
Littorina
species overlap in much of their North Atlantic ranges but have different colonization histories:
L. saxatilis
is native on both North Atlantic coasts and islands, and
L. littorea
is native to the eastern Atlantic but introduced to the west. Using an extensive mitochondrial dataset (1236 sequences; 85 sites), we examined how their opposing reproductive strategies correspond to their distributions and phylogeographies.
Littorina saxatilis
exhibited a heterogeneous genetic structure reflecting post-glacial recolonization from multiple refugial sites, while
L. littorea
had a homogeneous structure with a post-glacial history characterized by recolonization from one main refugial area in the northeast Atlantic. Further, haplotype diversity was significantly depressed in northwest Atlantic
L. littorea
populations, signifying a strong bottleneck characteristic of a human-mediated introduction. In contrast, haplotype diversity in
L. saxatilis
was similar between the two regions, demonstrating long-term history on both coasts. Thus, our study suggests contrasting life-history characteristics were a major structuring force in the phylogeographic patterns of these related species following large-scale disturbances (natural and anthropogenic) that compel contraction and redistribution over large areas. |
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ISSN: | 0025-3162 1432-1793 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00227-021-03918-8 |