Genetic diversity of the NE Atlantic sea urchin Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis unveils chaotic genetic patchiness possibly linked to local selective pressure

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Abstract

We compared the genetic differentiation in the green sea urchin Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis from discrete populations on the NE Atlantic coast. By using eight recently developed microsatellite markers, genetic structure was compared between populations from the Danish Strait in the south to the Barents Sea in the north (56–79°N). Urchins are spread by pelagic larvae and may be transported long distances by northwards-going ocean currents. Two main superimposed patterns were identified. The first showed a subtle but significant genetic differentiation from the southernmost to the northernmost of the studied populations and could be explained by an isolation by distance model. The second pattern included two coastal populations in mid-Norway (65°N), NH and NS, as well as the northernmost population of continental Norway (71°N) FV. They showed a high degree of differentiation from all other populations. The explanation to the second pattern is most likely chaotic genetic patchiness caused by introgression from another species, S. pallidus, into S. droebachiensis resulting from selective pressure. Ongoing sea urchin collapse and kelp forests recovery are observed in the area of NH, NS and FV populations. High gene flow between populations spanning more than 22° in latitude suggests a high risk of new grazing events to occur rapidly in the future if conditions for sea urchins are favourable. On the other hand, the possibility of hybridization in association with collapsing populations may be used as an early warning indicator for monitoring purposes.

Figures

  • Fig. 1 Map of the study area including sampling stations and a simplified illustration of the dominating currents along the coast from the Danish Belt Sea to the Barents Sea. Green arrows indicate the northbound coastal current, and red arrows indicate ocean currents from the NE Atlantic. Red circles and white boxes show the position and codes of the sample stations. See Table 1 for explanation of the codes. Oslofjorden (IO and D2), Lysefjorden (LY), Salangen (SI and SY) and Isfjorden (KW) are sill fjords, whereas the fjords represented by NH, NS VI and FV are open fjords/coastal areas. DV is located in the Danish Straits. The squares indicates groups (South and North) used in Migrate analysis
  • Table 1 Stations used in the study. Station name, station code, sampling depth (metre), urchin size (average diameter ± standard deviation), position (WGS1984, latitude and longitude), distance (km) downstream the Vejrø station and number of analysed individuals per population (N) are shown
  • Table 2 Characterization of 8 microsatellite loci for S. droebachiensis using 321 individuals
  • Table 3 Allelic richness, private alleles, expected and observed heterozygosity (genetic diversity) within populations
  • Table 4 Genetic differentiation between populations and sub-populations
  • Fig. 2 Allele frequencies by populations shown for locus Strdro-1356. See Supplement 1 for the other 7 loci
  • Table 5 Estimates of the fixation index (FIS) in INEST 2.0
  • Table 6 Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) populations within Group 1

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Norderhaug, K. M., Anglès d’Auriac, M. B., Fagerli, C. W., Gundersen, H., Christie, H., Dahl, K., & Hobæk, A. (2016). Genetic diversity of the NE Atlantic sea urchin Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis unveils chaotic genetic patchiness possibly linked to local selective pressure. Marine Biology, 163(2), 1–13. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-015-2801-y

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