Abstract

BackgroundUnderstanding region-wide patterns of larval connectivity and gene flow is crucial for managing and conserving marine biodiversity. Dongsha Atoll National Park (DANP), located in the northern South China Sea (SCS), was established in 2007 to study and conserve this diverse and remote coral atoll. However, the role of Dongsha Atoll in connectivity throughout the SCS is seldom studied. In this study, we aim to evaluate the role of DANP in conserving regional marine biodiversity.MethodsIn total, 206 samples across nine marine species were collected and sequenced from Dongsha Atoll, and these data were combined with available sequence data from each of these nine species archived in the Genomic Observatories Metadatabase (GEOME). Together, these data provide the most extensive population genetic analysis of a single marine protected area. We evaluate metapopulation structure for each species by using a coalescent sampler, selecting among panmixia, stepping-stone, and island models of connectivity in a likelihood-based framework. We then completed a heuristic graph theoretical analysis based on maximum dispersal distance to get a sense of Dongsha’s centrality within the SCS.ResultsOur dataset yielded 111 unique haplotypes across all taxa at DANP, 58% of which were not sampled elsewhere. Analysis of metapopulation structure showed that five out of nine species have strong regional connectivity across the SCS such that their gene pools are effectively panmictic (mean pelagic larval duration (PLD) = 78 days, sd = 60 days); while four species have stepping-stone metapopulation structure, indicating that larvae are exchanged primarily between nearby populations (mean PLD = 37 days, sd = 15 days). For all but one species, Dongsha was ranked within the top 15 out of 115 large reefs in the South China Sea for betweenness centrality. Thus, for most species, Dongsha Atoll provides an essential link for maintaining stepping-stone gene flow across the SCS.ConclusionsThis multispecies study provides the most comprehensive examination of the role of Dongsha Atoll in marine connectivity in the South China Sea to date. Combining new and existing population genetic data for nine coral reef species in the region with a graph theoretical analysis, this study provides evidence that Dongsha Atoll is an important hub for sustaining connectivity for the majority of coral-reef species in the region.

Highlights

  • With coral reefs and their communities in accelerating global decline (Hughes et al, 2003, 2018), governments around the world have established Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) as a way to counteract this trend (Selig & Bruno, 2010)

  • Combining new and existing population genetic data for nine coral reef species in the region with a graph theoretical analysis, this study provides evidence that Dongsha Atoll is an important hub for sustaining connectivity for the majority of coral-reef species in the region

  • 58% of these haplotypes were apparently private to Dongsha Atoll, ranging from 5% in the oval butterflyfish Chaetodon lunulatus to ~80% in the whorled nerite Nerita plicata and the striated surgeonfish Ctenochaetus striatus

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Summary

Introduction

With coral reefs and their communities in accelerating global decline (Hughes et al, 2003, 2018), governments around the world have established Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) as a way to counteract this trend (Selig & Bruno, 2010). In a likelihood-based model selection framework, such methods can distinguish between models of effective panmixia (high regional gene flow) and metapopulation models in which larvae disperse only to nearby populations (stepping-stone model) or to all sampled populations (island model; Beerli & Palczewski, 2010). Methods: In total, 206 samples across nine marine species were collected and sequenced from Dongsha Atoll, and these data were combined with available sequence data from each of these nine species archived in the Genomic Observatories Metadatabase (GEOME). Together, these data provide the most extensive population genetic analysis of a single marine protected area.

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