AI Article Synopsis

  • Gene flow plays a critical role in shaping the genetic structure of marine populations, particularly in species with non-migratory adults like the broadnosed pipefish, which lack a pelagic larval stage.
  • The study found that populations of the pipefish showed rapid declines in abundance correlations over distances as short as 2 km due to fragmented habitats, contrasting with fish species that possess pelagic larval stages which exhibited greater connectivity.
  • Overall, the research confirms that fragmented habitats and the absence of a pelagic larval stage lead to increased genetic structure in non-migratory populations, while the presence of pelagic larvae aids in demographic connectivity and gene flow, although barriers can still affect this flow.

Article Abstract

Gene flow shapes spatial genetic structure and the potential for local adaptation. Among marine animals with nonmigratory adults, the presence or absence of a pelagic larval stage is thought to be a key determinant in shaping gene flow and the genetic structure of populations. In addition, the spatial distribution of suitable habitats is expected to influence the distribution of biological populations and their connectivity patterns. We used whole genome sequencing to study demographic history and reduced representation (double-digest restriction associated DNA) sequencing data to analyse spatial genetic structure in broadnosed pipefish (Syngnathus typhle). Its main habitat is eelgrass beds, which are patchily distributed along the study area in southern Norway. Demographic connectivity among populations was inferred from long-term (~30-year) population counts that uncovered a rapid decline in spatial correlations in abundance with distance as short as ~2 km. These findings were contrasted with data for two other fish species that have a pelagic larval stage (corkwing wrasse, Symphodus melops; black goby, Gobius niger). For these latter species, we found wider spatial scales of connectivity and weaker genetic isolation-by-distance patterns, except where both species experienced a strong barrier to gene flow, seemingly due to lack of suitable habitat. Our findings verify expectations that a fragmented habitat and absence of a pelagic larval stage promote genetic structure, while presence of a pelagic larvae stage increases demographic connectivity and gene flow, except perhaps over extensive habitat gaps.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9311693PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.16415DOI Listing

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