Abstract

Populations of three branching Caribbean demosponge species are composed of clones produced by asexual fragmentation. Dispersal of the fragments before they become established as independent individuals scatters clone members widely and intermixes members of different clones, complicating study of the clone structure of these populations and contrasting with many other sessile clonal organisms. Clone structures of these populations were inferred using a combination of tissue-compatibility relationships and an analysis of variations in morphology and colour. Although tissue compatibility cannot be used for precise identification of sponge clones, in general, patterns of variation in morphological characters influencing fragmentation and patterns of fragment dispersal and recruitment suggest that, in these populations, tissue-compatibility relationships closely reflect clone structure. Conditions that must be met in order to use tissue compatibility for study of sponge clones are discussed, and previous results, from which conflicting conclusions have been drawn, reconciled in this context. Variations among clones in numbers of physiologically independent members and in size and shape of areal extent are discussed in the context of processes that may affect evolution of clonal characters in these populations and in other species that propagate by dispersing asexual fragments.

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