Abstract

Ficopomatus enigmaticus (Fauvel, 1923) is a reef-building serpulid polychaete that has invaded estuaries worldwide, causing environmental and economic harm. Although Australia has long been suggested as a place of origin for the species, this remains unclear. We tested for genetic patterns across the range of F. enigmaticus in southern Australia, predicting that if the species is an Australian native, it would show evidence of (east-west) phylogeographic patterns often observed in native marine species in southern Australia. Unexpectedly, concordant patterns from mitochondrial (Cyt B) sequencing and nuclear marker (iSSR) profiles suggested the presence of at least three genetic groups (putative species), not distributed simply as “east” or “west”. Two common (and closely related) groups were present across Australia and were often found together in the same aggregations. A third group was only found in southeast Australia and was morphologically similar to F. uschakovi (Pillai, 1960), a species previously reported from tropical areas. The discovery of multiple cryptic species with overlapping ranges means that more work is needed to resolve whether any of the F. enigmaticus sensu lato group has an Australian origin and to determine how they are related to invasive populations of F. enigmaticus elsewhere.

Highlights

  • Bioinvasion can be the ultimate consequence of aquatic species being translocated around the world via hulls or the ballast water of ships (Carlton 1985, 1996a)

  • Within the complete alignment, including sequences representing F. miamiensis, F. macrodon and the outgroup Hydroides trivesiculosa, we identified variation in sequence length, which was always in the order of three base pairs

  • Our results did not show east-west phylogeographic patterns expected for populations of native F. enigmaticus, neither do they rule out an Australian origin

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bioinvasion can be the ultimate consequence of aquatic species being translocated around the world via hulls or the ballast water of ships (Carlton 1985, 1996a). Ficopomatus enigmaticus (Fauvel, 1923), a serpulid polychaete, appears to be one such species that has invaded many of the world’s warm temperate estuaries, likely over the last century. In many places, this worm forms reefs of calcareous tubes that have significant effects on estuarine ecosystems and it has become a nuisance biofouling organism (Davies et al 1989). The species is established around the world and unlikely to be eradicated (reviewed by Dittmann et al 2009), there has been a long standing debate about where the species originates

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call