首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Testing the genetic predictions of a biogeographical model in a dominant endemic Eastern Pacific coral (Porites panamensis) using a genetic seascape approach
Authors:Nancy C Saavedra‐Sotelo  Luis E Calderon‐Aguilera  Héctor Reyes‐Bonilla  David A Paz‐García  Ramón A López‐Pérez  Amilcar Cupul‐Magaña  José A Cruz‐Barraza  Axayácatl Rocha‐Olivares
Institution:1. Laboratorio de Ecología Molecular, Departamento de Oceanografía Biológica, CICESE, , Baja California, 22860 México;2. Laboratorio de Ecología y Pesquerías de la Zona Costera, Departamento de Ecología Marina, CICESE, , Baja California, 22860 México;3. Departamento de Biología Marina, Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Sur, , Baja California Sur, 23080 México;4. Laboratorio de Genética para la Conservación, Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas del Noroeste, , Baja California Sur, 23096 México;5. Laboratorio de Ecosistemas Costeros, Departamento de Hidrobiología, UAM‐Iztapalapa, , Distrito Federal, 09340 México;6. Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas, Centro Universitario de la Costa, Universidad de Guadalajara, , Jalisco, 48280 México;7. Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (Unidad Académica Mazatlán), , Sinaloa, 82040 México
Abstract:The coral fauna of the Eastern Tropical Pacific (ETP) is depauperate and peripheral; hence, it has drawn attention to the factors allowing its survival. Here, we use a genetic seascape approach and ecological niche modeling to unravel the environmental factors correlating with the genetic variation of Porites panamensis, a hermatypic coral endemic to the ETP. Specifically, we test if levels of diversity and connectivity are higher among abundant than among depauperate populations, as expected by a geographically relaxed version of the Abundant Center Hypothesis (rel‐ACH). Unlike the original ACH, referring to a geographical center of distribution of maximal abundance, the rel‐ACH refers only to a center of maximum abundance, irrespective of its geographic position. The patterns of relative abundance of P. panamensis in the Mexican Pacific revealed that northern populations from Baja California represent its center of abundance; and southern depauperate populations along the continental margin are peripheral relative to it. Genetic patterns of diversity and structure of nuclear DNA sequences (ribosomal DNA and a single copy open reading frame) and five alloenzymatic loci partially agreed with rel‐ACH predictions. We found higher diversity levels in peninsular populations and significant differentiation between peninsular and continental colonies. In addition, continental populations showed higher levels of differentiation and lower connectivity than peninsular populations in the absence of isolation by distance in each region. Some discrepancies with model expectations may relate to the influence of significant habitat discontinuities in the face of limited dispersal potential. Environmental data analyses and niche modeling allowed us to identify temperature, water clarity, and substrate availability as the main factors correlating with patterns of abundance, genetic diversity, and structure, which may hold the key to the survival of P. panamensis in the face of widespread environmental degradation.
Keywords:Ecological niche modeling  genetic diversity  genetic structure  hermatypic coral  MaxEnt  relaxed Abundant Center Hypothesis  seascape genetics
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号