AI Article Synopsis

  • Spatial genetic structure (SGS) is crucial for how populations adapt to environmental changes, particularly in species that can reproduce both sexually and asexually, such as reef-building corals.
  • In a study of nearly 600 Montipora capitata colonies in Kāne'ohe Bay, researchers found that asexual reproduction (clonal colonies) was relatively rare but significantly influenced spatial genetic distributions, especially in high wave energy areas.
  • While environmental factors like temperature and wave height predicted some genetic variation, they only accounted for 5% of it, indicating that genetic diversity persists in this impacted ecosystem, suggesting potential for adaptation to environmental pressures.

Article Abstract

Spatial genetic structure (SGS) is important to a population's ability to adapt to environmental change. For species that reproduce both sexually and asexually, the relative contribution of each reproductive mode has important ecological and evolutionary implications because asexual reproduction can have a strong effect on SGS. Reef-building corals reproduce sexually, but many species also propagate asexually under certain conditions. To understand SGS and the relative importance of reproductive mode across environmental gradients, we evaluated genetic relatedness in almost 600 colonies of Montipora capitata across 30 environmentally characterized sites in Kāne'ohe Bay, O'ahu, Hawaii, using low-depth restriction digest-associated sequencing. Clonal colonies were relatively rare overall but influenced SGS. Clones were located significantly closer to one another spatially than average colonies and were more frequent on sites where wave energy was relatively high, suggesting a strong role of mechanical breakage in their formation. Excluding clones, we found no evidence of isolation by distance within sites or across the bay. Several environmental characteristics were significant predictors of the underlying genetic variation (including degree heating weeks, time spent above 30°C, depth, sedimentation rate and wave height); however, they only explained 5% of this genetic variation. Our results show that asexual fragmentation contributes to the ecology of branching corals at local scales and that genetic diversity is maintained despite strong environmental gradients in a highly impacted ecosystem, suggesting potential for broad adaptation or acclimatization in this population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9825948PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.16655DOI Listing

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