Allan Wilson Centre for Molecular Ecology and Evolution, Department of Zoology, University of Otago, 340 Great King St, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand.
BMC Evol Biol. 2010 Jul 1;10:203. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-10-203.
South America's western coastline, extending in a near-straight line across some 35 latitudinal degrees, presents an elegant setting for assessing both contemporary and historic influences on cladogenesis in the marine environment. Southern bull-kelp (Durvillaea antarctica) has a broad distribution along much of the Chilean coast. This species represents an ideal model taxon for studies of coastal marine connectivity and of palaeoclimatic effects, as it grows only on exposed rocky coasts and is absent from beaches and ice-affected shores. We expected that, along the central Chilean coast, D. antarctica would show considerable phylogeographic structure as a consequence of the isolating effects of distance and habitat discontinuities. In contrast, we hypothesised that further south--throughout the region affected by the Patagonian Ice Sheet at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM)--D. antarctica would show relatively little genetic structure, reflecting postglacial recolonisation.
Mitochondrial (COI) and chloroplast (rbcL) DNA analyses of D. antarctica from 24 Chilean localities (164 individuals) revealed two deeply divergent (4.5 - 6.1% for COI, 1.4% for rbcL) clades from the centre and south of the country, with contrasting levels and patterns of genetic structure. Among populations from central Chile (32 degrees-44 degrees S), substantial phylogeographic structure was evident across small spatial scales, and a significant isolation-by-distance effect was observed. Genetic disjunctions in this region appear to correspond to the presence of long beaches. In contrast to the genetic structure found among central Chilean populations, samples from the southern Chilean Patagonian region (49 degrees-56 degrees S) were genetically homogeneous and identical to a haplotype recently found throughout the subantarctic region.
Southern (Patagonian) Chile has been recolonised by D. antarctica relatively recently, probably since the LGM. The inferred trans-oceanic ancestry of these Patagonian populations supports the notion that D. antarctica is capable of long-distance dispersal via rafting. In contrast, further north in central Chile, the correspondence of genetic disjunctions in D. antarctica with long beaches indicates that habitat discontinuity drives genetic isolation among established kelp populations. We conclude that rafting facilitates colonisation of unoccupied shores, but has limited potential to enhance gene-flow among established populations. Broadly, this study demonstrates that some taxa may be considered to have either high or low dispersal potential across different temporal and geographic scales.
南美洲西部海岸线呈近直线延伸,跨越约 35 个纬度,为评估海洋环境中当代和历史对分支形成的影响提供了一个优雅的环境。南部巨藻(Durvillaea antarctica)在智利大部分沿海地区广泛分布。该物种是研究沿海海洋连通性和古气候影响的理想模式分类群,因为它只生长在暴露的岩石海岸上,不存在于海滩和受冰影响的海岸上。我们预计,在智利中部海岸,由于距离和生境不连续性的隔离效应,D.antarctica 会表现出相当大的系统地理结构。相比之下,我们假设在更南部——整个受拉普拉塔冰盖影响的地区在末次冰期最大期(LGM)——D.antarctica 表现出相对较小的遗传结构,反映了冰期后的重新殖民化。
对来自智利 24 个地点(164 个个体)的 D.antarctica 的线粒体(COI)和叶绿体(rbcL)DNA 分析显示,来自该国中部和南部的两个深度分歧(COI 为 4.5-6.1%,rbcL 为 1.4%)的分支,具有相反的遗传结构水平和模式。在智利中部的种群中(32 度-44 度 S),小空间尺度上存在明显的系统地理结构,并且观察到显著的隔离距离效应。该地区的遗传分离似乎与长滩的存在相对应。与在智利中部种群中发现的遗传结构相反,来自智利南部巴塔哥尼亚地区(49 度-56 度 S)的样本具有遗传同质性,与最近在整个亚南极地区发现的一个单倍型相同。
南部(巴塔哥尼亚)智利最近才被 D.antarctica 重新殖民化,可能是在 LGM 之后。这些巴塔哥尼亚种群的推测跨洋祖先支持了 D.antarctica 能够通过漂流进行远距离扩散的观点。相比之下,在智利中部更北的地方,D.antarctica 中的遗传分离与长滩相对应,表明生境不连续性导致了已建立的巨藻种群之间的遗传隔离。我们得出结论,漂流促进了未占据海岸的殖民化,但对已建立种群之间的基因流动的增强潜力有限。总的来说,这项研究表明,某些分类群在不同的时间和地理尺度上可能被认为具有高或低的扩散潜力。