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Sponge diversification in marine lakes: Implications for phylogeography and population genomic studies on sponges.

Authors :
Maas, Diede
Maas, Diede
Prost, Stefan
de Leeuw, Christiaan
Bi, Ke
Smith, Lydia
Purwanto, Purwanto
Aji, Ludi
Tapilatu, Ricardo
Becking, Leontine
Gillespie, Rosemary
Maas, Diede
Maas, Diede
Prost, Stefan
de Leeuw, Christiaan
Bi, Ke
Smith, Lydia
Purwanto, Purwanto
Aji, Ludi
Tapilatu, Ricardo
Becking, Leontine
Gillespie, Rosemary
Source :
Ecology and Evolution; vol 13, iss 4; 2045-7758
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The relative influence of geography, currents, and environment on gene flow within sessile marine species remains an open question. Detecting subtle genetic differentiation at small scales is challenging in benthic populations due to large effective population sizes, general lack of resolution in genetic markers, and because barriers to dispersal often remain elusive. Marine lakes can circumvent confounding factors by providing discrete and replicated ecosystems. Using high-resolution double digest restriction-site-associated DNA sequencing (4826 Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms, SNPs), we genotyped populations of the sponge Suberites diversicolor (n = 125) to test the relative importance of spatial scales (1-1400 km), local environmental conditions, and permeability of seascape barriers in shaping population genomic structure. With the SNP dataset, we show strong intralineage population structure, even at scales <10 km (average F ST = 0.63), which was not detected previously using single markers. Most variation was explained by differentiation between populations (AMOVA: 48.8%) with signatures of population size declines and bottlenecks per lake. Although the populations were strongly structured, we did not detect significant effects of geographic distance, local environments, or degree of connection to the sea on population structure, suggesting mechanisms such as founder events with subsequent priority effects may be at play. We show that the inclusion of morphologically cryptic lineages that can be detected with the COI marker can reduce the obtained SNP set by around 90%. Future work on sponge genomics should confirm that only one lineage is included. Our results call for a reassessment of poorly dispersing benthic organisms that were previously assumed to be highly connected based on low-resolution markers.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Ecology and Evolution; vol 13, iss 4; 2045-7758
Notes :
application/pdf, Ecology and Evolution vol 13, iss 4 2045-7758
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1401040715
Document Type :
Electronic Resource