Jeffrey Benardine, Hale Peter, Degnan Bernard M, Degnan Sandie M
School of Integrative Biology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
Mol Ecol. 2007 Jan;16(2):289-304. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2006.03141.x.
Haliotis asinina is a broadcast-spawning mollusc that inhabits Indo-Pacific coral reefs. This tropical abalone develops through a nonfeeding larval stage that is competent to settle on specific species of coralline algae after 3-4 days in the plankton. Failure to contact an inductive algae within 10 days of hatching usually results in death. These life cycle characteristics suggest a limited capacity for dispersal and thus gene flow. This makes H. asinina particularly suitable for elucidating phylogeographical structure throughout the Indo-Malay Archipelagoes, and eastern Indian and western Pacific Oceans, all regions of biogeographical complexity and high conservation value. We assayed 482 bp of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase II gene in 206 abalone collected from 16 geographically discrete sites across the Indian and Pacific Oceans and Indo-Malay Archipelagoes. DNA sequence variation was analysed via population genetics and phylogenetics, and by nested clade analyses (NCA). Our data resolved clear phylogeographical breaks among major biogeographical regions, with sequence divergences ranging from a high of 3.7% and 3.0% between Indian and Pacific sites and Pacific and Indo-Malay sites, respectively, to a low of 1.1% between Indian and Indo-Malay sites. Despite the apparent limited dispersal capacity of H. asinina, no finer scale phylogeographical structure was resolved within the respective biogeographical regions. However, amova and NCA identified several significant associations between haplotypes and geographical distribution, most notably higher gene flow among geographical populations associated with major ocean currents. Our study provides further evidence that larval dispersal capacity alone is not a good predictor of population genetic structure in marine invertebrates. We infer instead that a combination of historical events (long-term barriers followed by range expansion associated with Pleistocene sea level changes) and contemporary processes (gene flow restricted by life history and oceanography) have shaped observed patterns of H. asinina phylogeography.
耳鲍是一种进行散播式产卵的软体动物,栖息于印度-太平洋珊瑚礁。这种热带鲍鱼在发育过程中有一个非摄食性的幼虫阶段,幼虫在浮游阶段3-4天后便有能力附着在特定种类的珊瑚藻上。孵化后10天内若未能接触到诱导性藻类,通常会导致死亡。这些生命周期特征表明其扩散能力有限,进而基因流动也有限。这使得耳鲍特别适合用于阐明整个印度-马来群岛、东印度洋和西太平洋的系统地理学结构,这些地区生物地理情况复杂且具有很高的保护价值。我们对从印度洋、太平洋以及印度-马来群岛16个地理上分散的地点采集的206只鲍鱼的线粒体细胞色素氧化酶II基因的482个碱基对进行了分析。通过群体遗传学、系统发育学以及嵌套分支分析(NCA)对DNA序列变异进行了分析。我们的数据揭示了主要生物地理区域之间明显的系统地理学间断,印度和太平洋地区之间、太平洋和印度-马来地区之间的序列差异分别高达3.7%和3.0%,而印度和印度-马来地区之间则低至1.1%。尽管耳鲍的扩散能力明显有限,但在各个生物地理区域内并未解析出更精细的系统地理学结构。然而,分子变异分析(AMOVA)和NCA确定了单倍型与地理分布之间的几个显著关联,最明显的是与主要洋流相关的地理种群之间有更高的基因流动。我们的研究进一步证明,仅幼虫扩散能力并不能很好地预测海洋无脊椎动物的种群遗传结构。相反,我们推断历史事件(长期障碍,随后是与更新世海平面变化相关的范围扩张)和当代过程(受生活史和海洋学限制的基因流动)共同塑造了耳鲍观察到的系统地理学模式。