首页> 外文期刊>Coral reefs: journal of the International Society for Reef Studies >Patterns of population structure and dispersal in the long-lived 'redwood' of the coral reef, the giant barrel sponge (Xestospongia muta)
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Patterns of population structure and dispersal in the long-lived 'redwood' of the coral reef, the giant barrel sponge (Xestospongia muta)

机译:寿命长的“红木”珊瑚礁(巨型桶状海绵)中的种群结构和扩散模式

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Sponges are one of the dominant fauna on Florida and Caribbean coral reefs, with species diversity often exceeding that of scleractinian corals. Despite the key role of sponges as structural components, habitat providers, and nutrient recyclers in reef ecosystems, their dispersal dynamics are little understood. We used ten microsatellite markers to study the population structure and dispersal patterns of a prominent reef species, the giant barrel sponge (Xestospongia muta), the long-lived "redwood" of the reef, throughout Florida and the Caribbean. F-statistics, exact tests of population differentiation, and Bayesian multi-locus genotype analyses revealed high levels of overall genetic partitioning (F (ST) = 0.12, P = 0.001) and grouped 363 individuals collected from the Bahamas, Honduras, US Virgin Islands, Key Largo (Florida), and the remainder of the Florida reef tract into at minimum five genetic clusters (K = 5). Exact tests, however, revealed further differentiation, grouping sponges sampled from five locations across the Florida reef tract (similar to 250 km) into three populations, suggesting a total of six genetic populations across the eight locations sampled. Assignment tests showed dispersal over ecological timescales to be limited to relatively short distances, as the only migration detected among populations was within the Florida reef tract. Consequently, populations of this major coral reef benthic constituent appear largely self-recruiting. A combination of levels of genetic differentiation, genetic distance, and assignment tests support the important role of the Caribbean and Florida currents in shaping patterns of contemporary and historical gene flow in this widespread coral reef species.
机译:海绵是佛罗里达和加勒比海珊瑚礁上的主要动物区系之一,其物种多样性通常超过珊瑚。尽管海绵在珊瑚礁生态系统中作为结构成分,栖息地提供者和营养循环利用者发挥着关键作用,但对其分散动态的了解却很少。我们使用了十个微卫星标记来研究整个佛罗里达和加勒比海地区一个主要礁石物种,巨型桶状海绵(Xestospongia muta),礁石的长寿“红木”的种群结构和扩散模式。 F统计,人口分化的精确检验以及贝叶斯多基因座基因型分析显示,总体遗传划分水平很高(F(ST)= 0.12,P = 0.001),并从美国维尔京群岛洪都拉斯巴哈马群岛中收集了363个人,基拉戈岛(佛罗里达)和佛罗里达礁石的其余部分至少分为五个遗传簇(K = 5)。然而,精确的测试显示了进一步的分化,将从佛罗里达礁石带(约250公里)的五个位置采样的海绵分为三个种群,这表明在八个采样点共有六个遗传种群。分配测试表明,在生态时间尺度上的散布仅限于相对较短的距离,因为在人口中唯一检测到的迁移是在佛罗里达礁石带内。因此,这种主要的珊瑚礁底栖生物的种群大部分是自招募的。遗传分化水平,遗传距离和赋值测试的综合水平支持了加勒比海和佛罗里达洋流在塑造这种广泛的珊瑚礁物种中当代和历史基因流的方式中的重要作用。

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