Abstract

Molecular approaches have proven efficient to identify cryptic lineages within single taxonomic entities. Sometimes these cryptic lineages maybe previously unreported or unknown invasive taxa. The genetic structure of the marine gastropod Stramonita haemastoma has been examined in the Western Mediterranean and North‐Eastern Atlantic populations with mtDNA COI sequences and three newly developed microsatellite markers. We identified two cryptic lineages, differentially fixed for alternative mtDNA COI haplogroups and significantly differentiated at microsatellite loci. The mosaic distribution of the two lineages is unusual for a warm‐temperate marine invertebrate with a teleplanic larval stage. The Atlantic lineage was unexpectedly observed as a patch enclosed in the north of the Western Mediterranean Sea between eastern Spain and the French Riviera, and the Mediterranean lineage was found in Macronesian Islands. Although cyto‐nuclear disequilibrium is globally maintained, asymmetric introgression occurs in the Spanish region where the two lineages co‐occur in a hybrid zone. A first interpretation of our results is mito‐nuclear discordance in a stable postglacial hybrid zone. Under this hypothesis, though, the location of genetic discontinuities would be unusual among planktonic dispersers. An alternative interpretation is that the Atlantic lineage, also found in Senegal and Venezuela, has been introduced by human activities in the Mediterranean area and is introgressing Mediterranean genes during its propagation, as theoretically expected. This second hypothesis would add an additional example to the growing list of cryptic marine invasions revealed by molecular studies.

Highlights

  • Patterns of genetic structure in marine systems have been shown to be mainly related to two main factors: dispersal ability and biogeographic barriers (Riginos, Douglas, Jin, Shanahan, & Treml, 2011), to which we should append recent human-­related introductions of differentiated lineages by anthropogenic vectors (Rius, Turon, Bernardi, Volckaert, & Viard, 2015)

  • We studied the genetic structure of the red-­mouthed rock shell Stramonita haemastoma (Linnaeus, 1767) in the Western Mediterranean Sea and North-­Eastern Atlantic Ocean

  • Our mito-­nuclear genetic analysis of the teleplanic dispersal snail S. haemastoma in the Western Mediterranean Sea and Eastern Atlantic Ocean has revealed (i) two cryptic mitochondrial lineages differentiated at three nuclear microsatellite markers, (ii) an unexpected mosaic distribution of the two lineages with a surprising patch of the Atlantic lineage in the North-­Western part of the Occidental basin in the Mediterranean Sea and (iii) hybridization between the two lineages when found in sympatry

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Patterns of genetic structure in marine systems have been shown to be mainly related to two main factors: dispersal ability and biogeographic barriers (Riginos, Douglas, Jin, Shanahan, & Treml, 2011), to which we should append recent human-­related introductions of differentiated lineages by anthropogenic vectors (Rius, Turon, Bernardi, Volckaert, & Viard, 2015). Claremont, Williams, Barraclough, and Reid (2011) conducted a study on the genus Stramonita which identified, in addition to the previously recognized outgroup Pacific species S. delessertiana, six members in the Stramonita haemastoma complex, S. biserialis in the South-­Eastern Pacific Ocean, S. floridana and S. canaliculata in the North-­Western Atlantic Ocean, S. rustica and S. brasiliensis in the South-­Western Atlantic Ocean, and S. haemastoma. The latter is the single representative of the species complex in the Eastern Atlantic, and Mediterranean Sea molecular data were mostly lacking for Mediterranean samples. We argue that such a distribution raises questions about the native vs. invasive status of these lineages

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
| CONCLUSION
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.