Abstract

For marine invertebrates with a benthic adult form and a planktonic larva phase, the connectivity among populations is mainly based on larval dispersal. While an extended larval phase will promote gene flow, other factors such as an intensive fishery and geographical barriers could lead to changes in genetic variability. In this study, the population genetic structure of the commercial crab Metacarcinus edwardsii was analyzed along 700 km of the Chilean coast. The analysis, based on eight microsatellite loci genotyped from megalopae and adult crabs, considered temporal and spatial patterns of genetic variation. The results showed no evidence of spatial patterns in genetic structure, suggesting high connectivity among the sampling sites. The temporal analysis showed no evidence of changes in allele frequencies and no evidence of a recent bottleneck. The lack of spatial structure and allele variation over time could be explained by the interaction of factors such as i) low reproductive variance due to the capability of females to store sperm in the seminal receptacle, which can be used for successive broods, ii) high larval dispersal and iii) high individual reproductive output. Using our data as priors, a genetic modelling approach coincided, predicting this temporal and spatial stability. The same analysis showed that a reduction in population size leads to the loss of genetic variability in populations, as well as of the genetic cohesiveness between populations, pointing out the importance management for species under exploitation, such as M. edwardsii.

Highlights

  • Most benthic marine invertebrates are sessile or have little movement in their adult stage; dispersion happens during the planktonic larval period [1,2]

  • To study the spatial genetic structure, 291 adult crabs were sampled from six localities: Concepción (CO), Los Molinos (LM), Ancud (AN), Calbuco (CA), Dalcahue (DA) and Quellón (QU) (Fig 1)

  • To study the temporal genetic variability a total of 157 megalopa larvae were collected from Los Molinos (LM) during four years (2009 to 2012) using a passive larva collector, described by Pardo et al 2010 [42]

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Summary

Introduction

Most benthic marine invertebrates are sessile or have little movement in their adult stage; dispersion happens during the planktonic larval period [1,2]. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0166029 November 4, 2016

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