Abstract
AbstractThis paper reviews the use of genetic data, in combination with manipulative experimentation, to infer the mode of reproduction and the extent and directionality of dispersal for a range of Australian temperate marine invertebrates. Local populations of obligately sexually reproducing species have been inferred to be strongly interconnected by larval dispersal, over distances of thousands of kilometres. Their larvae may be subject to strong post‐settlement selection, but this selection is independent of obvious geographic or intertidal gradients. Within local populations selection may therefore result in apparently chaotic genetic patchiness which is eliminated by the effects of sexual reproduction and the widespread dispersal and mixing of the colonizing larvae of each generation. In partial contrast, local populations of species which rely on asexual reproduction for the maintenance of populations show evidence of similar larval connections, but no recent settlement of their sexually generated larvae has been demonstrated. The apparent connectedness of these populations may reflect either historical events or a more episodic pattern of settlement by sexually generated larvae. Local populations of these species are more highly differentiated as a result of the continued asexual replication of a limited number of genotypes. In one of these species, reciprocal transplantation of the clones within and among populations has revealed that resident clones can be highly locally adapted (as reflected by much higher asexual fecundity), which implies that selection is an important determinant of the composition of local populations. Nevertheless, the failure to detect continuing sexual recruitment into these populations obscures the evolutionary significance of this finding.
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