Genetic seascape of the threatened Caribbean elkhorn coral,Acropora palmata, on the Puerto Rico Shelf
Autor: | Tomas Hrbek, Nikolaos V. Schizas, Joselyd Garcia Reyes, Pascal Mège |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Seascape
education.field_of_study Genetic diversity Ecology biology Population Aquatic Science biology.organism_classification Elkhorn coral Article Geography Genetic structure Threatened species Acropora education geographic locations Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Isolation by distance |
Zdroj: | Marine Ecology. 36:195-209 |
ISSN: | 0173-9565 |
DOI: | 10.1111/maec.12135 |
Popis: | It has been proposed that the elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata, is genetically separated into two distinct provinces in the Caribbean, an Eastern and a Western population admixing in western Puerto Rico and around the Mona Passage. In this study, the genetic structure of A. palmata sampled at 11 Puerto Rican localities and localities from Curaçao, the Bahamas and Guadeloupe were examined. Analyses using five microsatellite markers showed that 75% of sampled colonies had unique genotypes, the rest being clone mates. Genetic diversity among genets was high (HE = 0.761) and consistent across localities (0.685 to 0.844). FST ranged from −0.011 to 0.047 supporting low but significant genetic differentiation between localities within the previously reported Eastern and Western genetic provinces. Plots of genetic per geographic distances and significant Mantel tests supported isolation-by-distance (IBD) within Puerto Rico. Analysis with the software Structure favored a scenario with weak differentiation between two populations, assigning eastern Puerto Rican locations (Fajardo and Culebra), Guadeloupe and Curaçao to the Caribbean Eastern population and western Puerto Rican locations (west of Vega Baja and Ponce), Mona and the Bahamas to the Caribbean Western population. Vieques and San Juan area harbored admixed profiles. Standardized FSTs per 1,000 km unit further supported higher differentiation between localities belonging to different Structure populations, with IBD being stronger within Puerto Rico than on larger regional scales. This stronger genetic transition seems to separate localities between putative Eastern and Western provinces in the eastern Puerto Rican region, not around the Mona Passage. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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