Edgeloe Jane M, Starko Samuel, Pessarrodona Albert, Coleman Melinda A, Batley Jacqueline, Wernberg Thomas, Wood Georgina V
School of Biological Sciences, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Oceans Institute, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
J Phycol. 2025 Jun;61(3):539-557. doi: 10.1111/jpy.70023. Epub 2025 May 3.
Temperate seaweed forests are among the most productive and widespread habitats in coastal waters. However, they are under threat from climate change and other anthropogenic stressors. To effectively conserve and manage these ecosystems under these rising pressures, an understanding of the genetic diversity and structure of habitat-forming seaweeds will be necessary. Australia's Great Southern Reef, a global hotspot of endemic diversity, is home to one of the world's most speciose habitat-forming seaweed genera, Cystophora (order Fucales). Despite severe declines in some species, genomic data on this genus remain limited. We used a reduced representation genomic approach (DaRTSeq) to investigate the genetic diversity and structure of Cystophora racemosa, a dominant canopy-forming species, across ~850 km of its range. Our sequencing captured 4741 high-quality single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), and we distinguished neutral loci from those under natural selection (i.e., outlier loci). We identified strong population structure and high genetic differentiation for both neutral (mean F = 0.404) and outlier loci (mean F = 0.901). Across populations, genetic diversity was low (neutral: mean H = 0.046; outlier: H = 0.042), with high inferred inbreeding (neutral loci mean F = 0.531) and no evidence of isolation-by-distance. Several SNPs (n = 70) were observed to be putatively adaptive, with most (97%) correlated with annual maximum sea surface temperature (SST, °C), indicating local adaptation to this key ocean variable. Our results show that C. racemosa populations have low genetic diversity and high differentiation, both of which may increase the vulnerability of this important foundation species to global change.
温带海藻林是沿海水域中生产力最高、分布最广的栖息地之一。然而,它们正受到气候变化和其他人为压力源的威胁。为了在这些不断增加的压力下有效保护和管理这些生态系统,有必要了解形成栖息地的海藻的遗传多样性和结构。澳大利亚的大南礁是全球特有生物多样性的热点地区,是世界上物种最丰富的形成栖息地的海藻属之一——囊链藻属(墨角藻目)的所在地。尽管一些物种数量严重下降,但关于该属的基因组数据仍然有限。我们使用了一种简化基因组代表性方法(DArTSeq)来研究优势树冠形成物种总状囊链藻在其约850公里分布范围内的遗传多样性和结构。我们的测序捕获了4741个高质量单核苷酸多态性(SNP),并区分了中性位点和受自然选择的位点(即异常位点)。我们确定了中性位点(平均F = 0.404)和异常位点(平均F = 0.901)都有很强的种群结构和高遗传分化。在所有种群中,遗传多样性较低(中性:平均H = 0.046;异常:H = 0.042),推断出的近亲繁殖率较高(中性位点平均F = 0.531),并且没有距离隔离的证据。观察到几个SNP(n = 70)可能具有适应性,其中大多数(97%)与年最高海表温度(SST,°C)相关,表明对这一关键海洋变量的局部适应。我们的结果表明,总状囊链藻种群的遗传多样性较低且分化程度较高,这两者都可能增加这种重要基础物种对全球变化的脆弱性。