Drury C, Dale K E, Panlilio J M, Miller S V, Lirman D, Larson E A, Bartels E, Crawford D L, Oleksiak M F
Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, 4600 Rickenbacker Causeway, Miami, FL, 33149, USA.
Nova Southeastern University Oceanographic Center, 8000 N Ocean Drive, Dania Beach, FL, 33004, USA.
BMC Genomics. 2016 Apr 13;17:286. doi: 10.1186/s12864-016-2583-8.
Acropora cervicornis, a threatened, keystone reef-building coral has undergone severe declines (>90 %) throughout the Caribbean. These declines could reduce genetic variation and thus hamper the species' ability to adapt. Active restoration strategies are a common conservation approach to mitigate species' declines and require genetic data on surviving populations to efficiently respond to declines while maintaining the genetic diversity needed to adapt to changing conditions. To evaluate active restoration strategies for the staghorn coral, the genetic diversity of A. cervicornis within and among populations was assessed in 77 individuals collected from 68 locations along the Florida Reef Tract (FRT) and in the Dominican Republic.
Genotyping by Sequencing (GBS) identified 4,764 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Pairwise nucleotide differences (π) within a population are large (~37 %) and similar to π across all individuals. This high level of genetic diversity along the FRT is similar to the diversity within a small, isolated reef. Much of the genetic diversity (>90 %) exists within a population, yet GBS analysis shows significant variation along the FRT, including 300 SNPs with significant FST values and significant divergence relative to distance. There are also significant differences in SNP allele frequencies over small spatial scales, exemplified by the large FST values among corals collected within Miami-Dade county.
Large standing diversity was found within each population even after recent declines in abundance, including significant, potentially adaptive divergence over short distances. The data here inform conservation and management actions by uncovering population structure and high levels of diversity maintained within coral collections among sites previously shown to have little genetic divergence. More broadly, this approach demonstrates the power of GBS to resolve differences among individuals and identify subtle genetic structure, informing conservation goals with evolutionary implications.
鹿角珊瑚是一种濒危的、构建珊瑚礁的关键物种,在整个加勒比地区数量锐减(超过90%)。这些减少可能会降低遗传变异,从而阻碍该物种的适应能力。积极的恢复策略是减轻物种数量下降的常见保护方法,需要有关现存种群的遗传数据,以便在应对数量下降的同时有效维持适应不断变化条件所需的遗传多样性。为了评估鹿角珊瑚的积极恢复策略,对从佛罗里达礁区(FRT)和多米尼加共和国的68个地点采集的77个个体中的鹿角珊瑚种群内部和种群之间的遗传多样性进行了评估。
测序基因分型(GBS)鉴定出4764个单核苷酸多态性(SNP)。种群内成对核苷酸差异(π)很大(约37%),与所有个体的π相似。FRT沿线这种高水平的遗传多样性与一个小型孤立珊瑚礁内的多样性相似。大部分遗传多样性(>90%)存在于种群内部,但GBS分析显示FRT沿线存在显著变异,包括300个具有显著FST值且相对于距离有显著分化的SNP。在小空间尺度上SNP等位基因频率也存在显著差异,迈阿密 - 戴德县内采集的珊瑚之间FST值很大就说明了这一点。
即使近期数量有所下降,每个种群内仍发现了大量的遗传多样性,包括短距离内显著的、可能具有适应性的分化。这里的数据通过揭示种群结构以及先前显示遗传分化较小的珊瑚采集点之间维持的高水平多样性,为保护和管理行动提供了信息。更广泛地说,这种方法展示了GBS在解析个体间差异和识别细微遗传结构方面的能力,为具有进化意义的保护目标提供了信息。