Population Differentiation and Species Formation in the Deep Sea: The Potential Role of Environmental Gradients and Depth

Ecological speciation probably plays a more prominent role in diversification than previously thought, particularly in marine ecosystems where dispersal potential is great and where few obvious barriers to gene flow exist. This may be especially true in the deep sea where allopatric speciation seems...

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Main Authors: Jennings, RM, Etter, RJ, Ficarra, L
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
DNA
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/5363
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spelling fttempleuniv:oai:scholarshare.temple.edu:20.500.12613/5363 2023-05-15T17:34:33+02:00 Population Differentiation and Species Formation in the Deep Sea: The Potential Role of Environmental Gradients and Depth Jennings, RM Etter, RJ Ficarra, L 2013-10-01 e77594-e77594 https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/5363 en eng Public Library of Science (PLoS) 10.1371/journal.pone.0077594 PLoS ONE 1932-6203 24098590 (pubmed) http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/5363 CC BY CC-BY Animals Atlantic Ocean Bayes Theorem Bivalvia Cell Nucleus DNA Mitochondrial Ecosystem Gene Flow Genetic Speciation Genetic Variation Multilocus Sequence Typing Phylogeny Journal Article Article 2013 fttempleuniv https://doi.org/20.500.12613/5363 2021-08-26T18:59:51Z Ecological speciation probably plays a more prominent role in diversification than previously thought, particularly in marine ecosystems where dispersal potential is great and where few obvious barriers to gene flow exist. This may be especially true in the deep sea where allopatric speciation seems insufficient to account for the rich and largely endemic fauna. Ecologically driven population differentiation and speciation are likely to be most prevalent along environmental gradients, such as those attending changes in depth. We quantified patterns of genetic variation along a depth gradient (1600-3800m) in the western North Atlantic for a protobranch bivalve (Nucula atacellana) to test for population divergence. Multilocus analyses indicated a sharp discontinuity across a narrow depth range, with extremely low gene flow inferred between shallow and deep populations for thousands of generations. Phylogeographical discordance occurred between nuclear and mitochondrial loci as might be expected during the early stages of species formation. Because the geographic distance between divergent populations is small and no obvious dispersal barriers exist in this region, we suggest the divergence might reflect ecologically driven selection mediated by environmental correlates of the depth gradient. As inferred for numerous shallow-water species, environmental gradients that parallel changes in depth may play a key role in the genesis and adaptive radiation of the deep-water fauna. © 2013 Jennings et al. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic TUScholarShare (Temple University) Jennings ENVELOPE(72.556,72.556,-70.145,-70.145)
institution Open Polar
collection TUScholarShare (Temple University)
op_collection_id fttempleuniv
language English
topic Animals
Atlantic Ocean
Bayes Theorem
Bivalvia
Cell Nucleus
DNA
Mitochondrial
Ecosystem
Gene Flow
Genetic Speciation
Genetic Variation
Multilocus Sequence Typing
Phylogeny
spellingShingle Animals
Atlantic Ocean
Bayes Theorem
Bivalvia
Cell Nucleus
DNA
Mitochondrial
Ecosystem
Gene Flow
Genetic Speciation
Genetic Variation
Multilocus Sequence Typing
Phylogeny
Jennings, RM
Etter, RJ
Ficarra, L
Population Differentiation and Species Formation in the Deep Sea: The Potential Role of Environmental Gradients and Depth
topic_facet Animals
Atlantic Ocean
Bayes Theorem
Bivalvia
Cell Nucleus
DNA
Mitochondrial
Ecosystem
Gene Flow
Genetic Speciation
Genetic Variation
Multilocus Sequence Typing
Phylogeny
description Ecological speciation probably plays a more prominent role in diversification than previously thought, particularly in marine ecosystems where dispersal potential is great and where few obvious barriers to gene flow exist. This may be especially true in the deep sea where allopatric speciation seems insufficient to account for the rich and largely endemic fauna. Ecologically driven population differentiation and speciation are likely to be most prevalent along environmental gradients, such as those attending changes in depth. We quantified patterns of genetic variation along a depth gradient (1600-3800m) in the western North Atlantic for a protobranch bivalve (Nucula atacellana) to test for population divergence. Multilocus analyses indicated a sharp discontinuity across a narrow depth range, with extremely low gene flow inferred between shallow and deep populations for thousands of generations. Phylogeographical discordance occurred between nuclear and mitochondrial loci as might be expected during the early stages of species formation. Because the geographic distance between divergent populations is small and no obvious dispersal barriers exist in this region, we suggest the divergence might reflect ecologically driven selection mediated by environmental correlates of the depth gradient. As inferred for numerous shallow-water species, environmental gradients that parallel changes in depth may play a key role in the genesis and adaptive radiation of the deep-water fauna. © 2013 Jennings et al.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jennings, RM
Etter, RJ
Ficarra, L
author_facet Jennings, RM
Etter, RJ
Ficarra, L
author_sort Jennings, RM
title Population Differentiation and Species Formation in the Deep Sea: The Potential Role of Environmental Gradients and Depth
title_short Population Differentiation and Species Formation in the Deep Sea: The Potential Role of Environmental Gradients and Depth
title_full Population Differentiation and Species Formation in the Deep Sea: The Potential Role of Environmental Gradients and Depth
title_fullStr Population Differentiation and Species Formation in the Deep Sea: The Potential Role of Environmental Gradients and Depth
title_full_unstemmed Population Differentiation and Species Formation in the Deep Sea: The Potential Role of Environmental Gradients and Depth
title_sort population differentiation and species formation in the deep sea: the potential role of environmental gradients and depth
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/5363
long_lat ENVELOPE(72.556,72.556,-70.145,-70.145)
geographic Jennings
geographic_facet Jennings
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation Public Library of Science (PLoS)
10.1371/journal.pone.0077594
PLoS ONE
1932-6203
24098590 (pubmed)
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/5363
op_rights CC BY
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12613/5363
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