Palumbi Stephen R, Walker Nia S, Hanson Erik, Armstrong Katrina, Lippert Marilla, Cornwell Brendan, Nestor Victor, Golbuu Yimnang
Department of Biology and Oceans Department Hopkins Marine Station of Stanford University Pacific Grove California USA.
Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology, University of Hawaii Honolulu Hawaii USA.
Evol Appl. 2023 Jan 5;16(2):518-529. doi: 10.1111/eva.13509. eCollection 2023 Feb.
The ability of local populations to adapt to future climate conditions is facilitated by a balance between short range dispersal allowing local buildup of adaptively beneficial alleles, and longer dispersal moving these alleles throughout the species range. Reef building corals have relatively low dispersal larvae, but most population genetic studies show differentiation only over 100s of km. Here, we report full mitochondrial genome sequences from 284 tabletop corals () from 39 patch reefs in Palau, and show two signals of genetic structure across reef scales from 1 to 55 km. First, divergent mitochondrial DNA haplotypes exist in different proportions from reef to reef, causing Phi values of 0.02 ( = 0.02). Second, closely related sequences of mitochondrial Haplogroups are more likely to be co-located on the same reefs than expected by chance alone. We also compared these sequences to prior data on 155 colonies from American Samoa. In these comparisons, many Haplogroups in Palau were disproportionately represented or absent in American Samoa, and inter-regional Phi = 0.259. However, we saw three instances of identical mitochondrial genomes between locations. Together, these data sets suggest two features of coral dispersal revealed by occurrence patterns in highly similar mitochondrial genomes. First, the Palau-American Samoa data suggest that long distance dispersal in corals is rare, as expected, but that it is common enough to deliver identical mitochondrial genomes across the Pacific. Second, higher than expected co-occurrence of Haplogroups on the same Palau reefs suggests greater retention of coral larvae on local reefs than predicted by many current oceanographic models of larval movement. Increased attention to local scales of coral genetic structure, dispersal, and selection may help increase the accuracy of models of future adaptation of corals and of assisted migration as a reef resilience intervention.
局部种群适应未来气候条件的能力,得益于短距离扩散与长距离扩散之间的平衡。短距离扩散能使适应性有益等位基因在局部积累,长距离扩散则能将这些等位基因传播到整个物种分布范围内。造礁珊瑚的幼体扩散能力相对较低,但大多数种群遗传学研究表明,其分化仅发生在百公里尺度上。在此,我们报告了来自帕劳39个斑块礁的284只桌面珊瑚( )的完整线粒体基因组序列,并展示了从1到55公里礁尺度上的两种遗传结构信号。首先,不同礁体中不同比例地存在着线粒体DNA单倍型差异,导致Phi值为0.02( = 0.02)。其次,线粒体单倍群的密切相关序列比随机预期更有可能共处于同一礁体上。我们还将这些序列与美属萨摩亚155个群体的先前数据进行了比较。在这些比较中,帕劳的许多单倍群在美属萨摩亚中占比失调或不存在,区域间Phi = 0.259。然而,我们在不同地点间发现了三个线粒体基因组相同的实例。综合这些数据集表明,高度相似的线粒体基因组出现模式揭示了珊瑚扩散的两个特征。首先,帕劳 - 美属萨摩亚的数据表明,正如预期的那样,珊瑚的长距离扩散很少见,但足以在太平洋传播相同的线粒体基因组。其次,帕劳同一礁体上单倍群的共现高于预期,这表明珊瑚幼体在当地礁体上的留存率高于许多当前幼虫运动海洋学模型的预测。更多关注珊瑚遗传结构、扩散和选择的局部尺度,可能有助于提高珊瑚未来适应模型以及作为珊瑚礁恢复力干预措施的辅助迁移模型的准确性。