Abstract

Dispersal and mating features strongly influence the evolutionary dynamics and the spatial genetic structure (SGS) of marine populations. For the first time in a marine invertebrate, we examined individual reproductive success, by conducting larval paternity assignments after a natural spawning event, combined with a small-scale SGS analysis within a population of the gorgonian Paramuricea clavata. Thirty four percent of the larvae were sired by male colonies surrounding the brooding female colonies, revealing that the bulk of the mating was accomplished by males from outside the studied area. Male success increased with male height and decreased with increasing male to female distance. The parentage analyses, with a strong level of self-recruitment (25%), unveiled the occurrence of a complex family structure at a small spatial scale, consistent with the limited larval dispersal of this species. However, no evidence of small scale SGS was revealed despite this family structure. Furthermore, temporal genetic structure was not observed, which appears to be related to the rather large effective population size. The low level of inbreeding found suggests a pattern of random mating in this species, which disagrees with expectations that limited larval dispersal should lead to biparental inbreeding. Surface brooding and investment in sexual reproduction in P. clavata contribute to multiple paternity (on average 6.4 fathers were assigned per brood), which enhance genetic diversity of the brood. Several factors may have contributed to the lack of biparental inbreeding in our study such as (i) the lack of sperm limitation at a small scale, (ii) multiple paternity, and (iii) the large effective population size. Thus, our results indicate that limited larval dispersal and complex family structure do not necessarily lead to biparental inbreeding and SGS. In the framework of conservation purposes, our results suggested that colony size, proximity among colonies and the population size should be taken into consideration for restoration projects.

Highlights

  • Dispersal plays a key role in the spatial partitioning of genetic diversity within and among marine populations and strongly influences the evolutionary dynamics of the populations through natural genetic processes

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • As null alleles can induce an overestimation of genetic distance (Chapuis and Estoup 2007), pairwise FST estimates were computed following the Excluding Null Allele (ENA) method in FREENA (Chapuis and Estoup 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

Dispersal plays a key role in the spatial partitioning of genetic diversity within and among marine populations and strongly influences the evolutionary dynamics of the populations through natural genetic processes (migration, natural selection, and genetic drift). Mating features, such as individual reproductive success, are key determinants which contribute to the spatial genetic structure (SGS) of the species. Reproductive success relies on the rates of fertilization, larval survival, and recruitment, which vary depending on the reproductive strategies, environmental factors, and stochastic events.

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