Document of bibliographic reference 324063

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
A multispecies approach reveals hot spots and cold spots of diversity and connectivity in invertebrate species with contrasting dispersal modes
Abstract
Genetic diversity is crucial for species' maintenance and persistence, yet is often overlooked in conservation studies. Species diversity is more often reported due to practical constraints, but it is unknown if these measures of diversity are correlated. In marine invertebrates, adults are often sessile or sedentary and populations exchange genes via dispersal of gametes and larvae. Species with a larval period are expected to have more connected populations than those without larval dispersal. We assessed the relationship between measures of species and genetic diversity, and between dispersal ability and connectivity. We compiled data on genetic patterns and life history traits in nine species across five phyla. Sampling sites spanned 600km in the northwest Mediterranean Sea and focused on a 50-km area near Marseilles, France. Comparative population genetic approaches yielded three main results. (i) Species without larvae showed higher levels of genetic structure than species with free-living larvae, but the role of larval type (lecithotrophic or planktotrophic) was negligible. (ii) A narrow area around Marseilles, subject to offshore advection, limited genetic connectivity in most species. (iii) We identified sites with significant positive contributions to overall genetic diversity across all species, corresponding with areas near low human population densities. In contrast, high levels of human activity corresponded with a negative contribution to overall genetic diversity. Genetic diversity within species was positively and significantly linearly related to local species diversity. Our study suggests that local contribution to overall genetic diversity should be taken into account for future conservation strategies.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000418252300006
Bibliographic citation
Cahill, A.E.; De Jode, A.; Dubois, S.; Bouzaza, Z.; Aurelle, D.; Boissin, E.; Chabrol, O.; David, R.; Egea, E.; Ledoux, J.-B.; Mérigot, B.; Weber, A.A.-T.; Chenuil, A. (2017). A multispecies approach reveals hot spots and cold spots of diversity and connectivity in invertebrate species with contrasting dispersal modes. Mol. Ecol. 26(23): 6563-6577. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.14389
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Abigail Cahill
author
Name
Aurélien De Jode
author
Name
Sophie Dubois
author
Name
Zoheir Bouzaza
author
Name
Didier Aurelle
author
Name
Emilie Boissin
author
Name
Olivier Chabrol
author
Name
Romain David
author
Name
Emilie Egea
author
Name
Jean-Baptiste Ledoux
author
Name
Bastien Mérigot
author
Name
Alexandra Anh-Thu Weber
author
Name
Anne Chenuil

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.14389

Document metadata

date created
2020-05-14
date modified
2020-05-26