Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach

Dispersal and connectivity of patellid limpets (Patella spp.) in the eastern North Atlantic have been examined by addressing reproductive biology, larval development, population genetics and physical modelling of dispersal. The reproductive cycles of four limpet species were assessed on the northern...

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Main Author: Ribeiro, Pedro Miguel de Azevedo
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/66261/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/66261/1/pedro_ribeiro-phd.pdf
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:66261 2023-07-30T04:05:38+02:00 Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach Ribeiro, Pedro Miguel de Azevedo 2008-11 text https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/66261/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/66261/1/pedro_ribeiro-phd.pdf en eng https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/66261/1/pedro_ribeiro-phd.pdf Ribeiro, Pedro Miguel de Azevedo (2008) Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach. University of Southampton, School of Biological Sciences, Doctoral Thesis, 278pp. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2008 ftsouthampton 2023-07-09T21:05:17Z Dispersal and connectivity of patellid limpets (Patella spp.) in the eastern North Atlantic have been examined by addressing reproductive biology, larval development, population genetics and physical modelling of dispersal. The reproductive cycles of four limpet species were assessed on the northern and central Portugese coast, to determine spawning periods. This information was incorporated into dispersal models. The results showed that P. depressa and P. ulyssiponensis have almost year-round breeding, with a brief resting phase in the early summer. Conversely, the two other species displayed much shorter spawning periods, with gamete release taking place between December and March in P. vulgata and between September and December in P. rustica. The relationship between temperature and planktonic periods in P. depressa, P. ulyssiponensis, and P. vulgata was investigated with laboratory rearing experiments. Average duration of precompetent periods varied inversely with temperature, ranging between 3.7-14.0 days in P. depressa, 2.8-13.7 days in P. ulyssiponensis and 5.7-14.6 days in P. vulgata, whilst delay periods ranged between 15.8-25.4 days in P. depressa, 14.5-27 days in P. ulyssiponensis and 16.5-25 days in P. vulgata. Population genetic structure was examined on a range-wide scale in P. depressa and along the Iberian coast in P. rustica using microsatellite markers, plus one mtDNA locus in P. rustica. Results suggested high levels of gene flow throughout the study area and widespread lack of population differentiation in both species. A biophysical model of dispersal has been developed to assess the degree of demographic connectivity over ecological and evolutionary time frames, and to identify possible barriers to dispersal for P. depressa and P. rustica. The model predicted high levels of connectivity through most of the study area in both species, but in P. depressa simulations identified two large extensions of adult habitat discontinuity as barriers to larval dispersal. The model also showed that ... Thesis North Atlantic University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language English
description Dispersal and connectivity of patellid limpets (Patella spp.) in the eastern North Atlantic have been examined by addressing reproductive biology, larval development, population genetics and physical modelling of dispersal. The reproductive cycles of four limpet species were assessed on the northern and central Portugese coast, to determine spawning periods. This information was incorporated into dispersal models. The results showed that P. depressa and P. ulyssiponensis have almost year-round breeding, with a brief resting phase in the early summer. Conversely, the two other species displayed much shorter spawning periods, with gamete release taking place between December and March in P. vulgata and between September and December in P. rustica. The relationship between temperature and planktonic periods in P. depressa, P. ulyssiponensis, and P. vulgata was investigated with laboratory rearing experiments. Average duration of precompetent periods varied inversely with temperature, ranging between 3.7-14.0 days in P. depressa, 2.8-13.7 days in P. ulyssiponensis and 5.7-14.6 days in P. vulgata, whilst delay periods ranged between 15.8-25.4 days in P. depressa, 14.5-27 days in P. ulyssiponensis and 16.5-25 days in P. vulgata. Population genetic structure was examined on a range-wide scale in P. depressa and along the Iberian coast in P. rustica using microsatellite markers, plus one mtDNA locus in P. rustica. Results suggested high levels of gene flow throughout the study area and widespread lack of population differentiation in both species. A biophysical model of dispersal has been developed to assess the degree of demographic connectivity over ecological and evolutionary time frames, and to identify possible barriers to dispersal for P. depressa and P. rustica. The model predicted high levels of connectivity through most of the study area in both species, but in P. depressa simulations identified two large extensions of adult habitat discontinuity as barriers to larval dispersal. The model also showed that ...
format Thesis
author Ribeiro, Pedro Miguel de Azevedo
spellingShingle Ribeiro, Pedro Miguel de Azevedo
Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach
author_facet Ribeiro, Pedro Miguel de Azevedo
author_sort Ribeiro, Pedro Miguel de Azevedo
title Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach
title_short Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach
title_full Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach
title_fullStr Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach
title_full_unstemmed Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach
title_sort dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach
publishDate 2008
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/66261/
https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/66261/1/pedro_ribeiro-phd.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/66261/1/pedro_ribeiro-phd.pdf
Ribeiro, Pedro Miguel de Azevedo (2008) Dispersal and connectivity of northeastern atlantic patellid limpets: a multidisciplinary approach. University of Southampton, School of Biological Sciences, Doctoral Thesis, 278pp.
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