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Intracoastal shipping drives patterns of regional population expansion by an invasive marine invertebrate
Authors:John A Darling  Leif‐Matthias Herborg  Ian C Davidson
Institution:1. National Exposure Research Laboratory, United States Environmental Protection Agency, , Durham, North Carolina, 27711;2. British Columbia Ministry of Environment, , Victoria, British Columbia, V8W9M1 Canada;3. Aquatic Bioinvasion Research and Policy Institute, Portland State University & Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, , Portland, Oregon, 97207‐0751
Abstract:Understanding the factors contributing to expansion of nonnative populations is a critical step toward accurate risk assessment and effective management of biological invasions. Nevertheless, few studies have attempted explicitly to test hypotheses regarding factors driving invasive spread by seeking correlations between patterns of vector movement and patterns of genetic connectivity. Herein, we describe such an attempt for the invasive tunicate Styela clava in the northeastern Pacific. We utilized microsatellite data to estimate gene flow between samples collected throughout the known range of S. clava in the region, and assessed correlation of these estimates with patterns of intracoastal commercial vessel traffic. Our results suggest that recent shipping patterns have contributed to the contemporary distribution of genetic variation. However, the analysis also indicates that other factors—including a complex invasion history and the influence of other vectors—have partially obscured genetic patterns associated with intracoastal population expansion.
Keywords:Invasive species  microsatellite  population genetics     Styela clava     vector analysis
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