School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, Queensland, 4072 Qld, Australia.
Ecol Lett. 2010 Jan;13(1):128-40. doi: 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2009.01408.x. Epub 2009 Nov 30.
The connectivity of marine populations is often surprisingly lower than predicted by the dispersal capabilities of propagules alone. Estimates of connectivity, moreover, do not always scale with distance and are sometimes counterintuitive. Population connectivity requires more than just the simple exchange of settlers among populations: it also requires the successful establishment and reproduction of exogenous colonizers. Marine organisms often disperse over large spatial scales, encountering very different environments and suffering extremely high levels of post-colonization mortality. Given the growing evidence that such selection pressures often vary over spatial scales that are much smaller than those of dispersal, we argue that selection will bias survival against exogenous colonizers. We call this selection against exogenous colonizers a phenotype-environment mismatch and argue that phenotype-environment mismatches represent an important barrier to connectivity in the sea. Crucially, these mismatches may operate independently of distance and thereby have the potential to explain the counterintuitive patterns of connectivity often seen in marine environments. We discuss how such mismatches might alter our understanding and management of marine populations.
海洋种群的连通性通常令人惊讶地低于单独由繁殖体扩散能力所预测的水平。此外,连通性的估计并不总是随距离而变化,有时甚至违反直觉。种群连通性不仅需要种群之间简单的定居者交换:它还需要外来殖民者的成功建立和繁殖。海洋生物通常在很大的空间尺度上扩散,遇到非常不同的环境,并遭受极高水平的殖民后死亡率。鉴于越来越多的证据表明,这种选择压力通常在比扩散尺度小得多的空间尺度上变化,我们认为选择会使外来殖民者的存活率降低。我们称这种对外来殖民者的选择为表型-环境不匹配,并认为表型-环境不匹配是海洋连通性的一个重要障碍。至关重要的是,这些不匹配可能独立于距离起作用,从而有可能解释在海洋环境中经常出现的违反直觉的连通性模式。我们讨论了这种不匹配可能如何改变我们对海洋种群的理解和管理。