Abstract
Marine microbes encounter a myriad of biotic and abiotic factors that can impact fitness by limiting their range and capacity to move between habitats. This is especially true for environmentally transmitted bacteria that cycle between their hosts and the surrounding habitat. As geologic history, biogeography, and other factors such as water temperature, salinity, and physical barriers can inhibit bacterial movement to novel environments, we chose to examine the genetic architecture of Euprymna albatrossae (Mollusca: Cephalopoda) and their Vibrio fischeri symbionts in the Philippine archipelago using a combined phylogeographic approach. Eleven separate sites in the Philippine islands were examined using haplotype estimates that were examined via nested clade analysis to determine the relationship between E. albatrossae and V. fischeri populations and their geographic location. Identical analyses of molecular variance (AMOVA) were used to estimate variation within and between populations for host and symbiont genetic data. Host animals demonstrated a significant amount of variation within island groups, while symbiont variation was found within individual populations. Nested clade phylogenetic analysis revealed that hosts and symbionts may have colonized this area at different times, with a sudden change in habitat. Additionally, host data indicate restricted gene flow, whereas symbionts show range expansion, followed by periodic restriction to genetic flow. These differences between host and symbiont networks indicate that factors “outside the squid” influence distribution of Philippine V. fischeri. Our results shed light on how geography and changing environmental factors can impact marine symbiotic associations at both local and global scales.
Highlights
The dispersal of marine species across suitable habitats can be affected by physical barriers as well as life history strategies (e.g., dispersal method of larvae and adult motility; (Kool, Paris, Barber & Cowen, 2011)
One region that has been studied extensively for its unique patterns of biogeography and geologic history is the Indo-Pacific barrier (IPB), which was created by the uprising of the Indonesian archipelago separating the Indian and Pacific oceans (Gaither, Toonen, Robertson, Planes & Bowen, 2010)
Very few studies have examined the connectivity of populations across the whole of the Philippine archipelago and what impact physical factors, life history, and geographic barriers have on the distribution of mutualist partners
Summary
The dispersal of marine species across suitable habitats can be affected by physical barriers (temperature, distances across oceans, island formations) as well as life history strategies (e.g., dispersal method of larvae and adult motility; (Kool, Paris, Barber & Cowen, 2011). Very few studies have examined the connectivity of populations across the whole of the Philippine archipelago and what impact physical factors, life history, and geographic barriers have on the distribution of mutualist partners. This has created a void in the knowledge of how local assemblages of mutualist associations are impacted by geography in this unique area. Local cycling of symbiotic V. fischeri exposes these bacteria to a wide range of abiotic and biotic factors outside the host that can affect their fitness and ability to infect new hosts This allows for symbiotically competent free-living bacteria to migrate to new host habitats, where they can invade and colonize different populations of sepiolids (Nyholm, 2004; Nyholm & Nishiguchi, 2008; Nyholm, Stabb, Ruby & McFall-Ngai, 2000). All squids were wild-caught adults and approximately 2-4 cm in mantle length
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