Church Samuel H, Abedon River B, Ahuja Namrata, Anthony Colin J, Destanović Dalila, Ramirez Diego A, Rojas Lourdes M, Albinsson Maria E, Álvarez Trasobares Itziar, Bergemann Reza E, Bogdanovic Ozren, Burdick David R, Cunha Tauana J, Damian-Serrano Alejandro, D'Elía Guillermo, Dion Kirstin B, Doyle Thomas K, Gonçalves João M, Gonzalez Rajal Alvaro, Haddock Steven H D, Helm Rebecca R, Le Gouvello Diane, Lewis Zachary R, Magalhães Bruno I M M, Mańko Maciej K, Mayorga-Adame C Gabriela, de Mendoza Alex, Moura Carlos J, Munro Catriona, Nel Ronel, Oguchi Kohei, Perelman Jessica N, Prieto Laura, Pitt Kylie A, Roughan Moninya, Schaeffer Amandine, Schmidt Andrea L, Sellanes Javier, Wilson Nerida G, Yamamoto Gaku, Lazo-Wasem Eric A, Simon Chris, Decker Mary Beth, Coughlan Jenn M, Dunn Casey W
Yale University, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 165 Prospect Street, New Haven, CT 06511, USA.
Yale University, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 165 Prospect Street, New Haven, CT 06511, USA.
Curr Biol. 2025 Jun 17. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2025.05.066.
The open ocean is a vast, highly connected environment, and the organisms found there have been hypothesized to represent massive, well-mixed populations. Of these, the man-o'-war or bluebottle (Physalia) is uniquely suited to long-distance travel, using its gas-filled float and muscular crest to catch the wind and sail the sea surface. We tested the hypothesis of a global, panmictic Physalia population by sequencing whole genomes of 151 samples and found five distinct lineages, with multiple lines of evidence indicating strong reproductive isolation, despite range overlap. We then scored thousands of images of Physalia uploaded to the citizen-science website inaturalist.org and identified four recognizable morphologies, described their geographical distribution, and linked them to four of the lineages that were identified with genomic data. We conclude there are at least four species, three of which correspond to species proposed by scientists in the 18th and 19th centuries, along with one newly named species, Physalia minuta Church and Dunn, sp. nov. Within each species, we observe significant population structure, with evidence of persistent subpopulations at a regional scale. We used ocean circulation modeling to show that these subpopulations align with predominant currents and winds. Our findings indicate that, even in these sailing species, genetic variation is highly partitioned across the open ocean.
公海是一个广阔且高度连通的环境,据推测,生活在那里的生物代表着大规模、充分混合的种群。其中,僧帽水母或蓝瓶僧帽水母(帆水母属)特别适合长途旅行,它们利用充满气体的浮囊和肌肉发达的脊来迎风航行于海面。我们通过对151个样本的全基因组进行测序,检验了帆水母全球随机交配种群的假设,发现了五个不同的谱系,尽管分布范围有重叠,但多条证据表明它们存在强烈的生殖隔离。然后,我们对上传到公民科学网站inaturalist.org上的数千张帆水母图像进行评分,识别出四种可识别的形态,描述了它们的地理分布,并将它们与通过基因组数据识别出的四个谱系联系起来。我们得出结论,至少有四个物种,其中三个与18世纪和19世纪科学家提出的物种相对应,还有一个新命名的物种,即小帆水母(Physalia minuta Church and Dunn, sp. nov.)。在每个物种内部,我们观察到显著的种群结构,有证据表明在区域尺度上存在持续的亚种群。我们利用海洋环流模型表明,这些亚种群与主要的洋流和风相吻合。我们的研究结果表明,即使在这些能“航行”的物种中,遗传变异在公海中也高度分化。