Abstract

AbstractGenetic connectivity provides a basis for evaluating the resilience of animal communities by elucidating gene flow and serves as a proxy for realized dispersal through planktonic larval dispersal, settlement, and reproductive success. Gandalfus yunohana (Takeda, Hashimoto & Ohta, 2000) is a brachyuran crab endemic to deep-sea hydrothermal vents in the northwestern Pacific. Although an iconic and often dominant species, the connectivity among its populations is yet to be examined. We obtained barcoding sequences of the mitochondrial COI gene of G. yunohana from four vent fields including two on the Izu Arc, one on the northern Mariana Arc, and one in the Okinawa Trough. Genetic diversity of populations on the Izu and northern Mariana arcs were similar and shared the dominant haplotypes, showing no genetic subdivision regardless of the habitat depth. The Okinawa Trough population, for which only one specimen was available, was not genetically different from specimens from the Izu/Mariana arc populations. Estimation of the number of immigrants among populations suggests that the migration from north to south is higher than in the reverse direction. Our results resonate with previous laboratory-culture experiments, suggesting a high dispersal capability for G. yunohana. Visual observations and sampling, however, suggest that G. yunohana is exceedingly rare in the Okinawa Trough. This perhaps results from a lack of sufficient larval supply from the Izu-Bonin-Mariana Arc vents, and there may not be a reproductive population in the Okinawa Trough.

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