Dispersal and clonal diversity of north-european parthenogenetic earthworms

8Citations
Citations of this article
28Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

At least 15 earthworm species are known to reproduce parthenogenetically. Most of these retain meiosis but the chromosome set is duplicated before meiosis; alternatively there is mitosis instead of meiosis. In both cases the offspring are genetic copies of the parent worm. Parthenogens are always polyploid. Parthenogenesis is associated with a dispersal advantage: a single propagule suffices to establish a new population. We have studied the clone pool structure and dispersal of ecologically dissimilar polyploid parthenogenetic lumbricids in northern Europe using enzyme electrophoresis. The anthropochorous Octolasion cyaneum has a very low number of clones in populations that are located far away from each other. The opposite is the eurytopic Dendrobaena octaedra that has a wide array of clones in each population. The ripicolous Eiseniella tetraedra disperses with flowing water and possibly also through zoochory. On subarctic North-European mountains its clone pool decreases with increasing elevation. At the top there are a few but persistent clones. Small brooks carry propagules downstream, so that at the mouths of brooks clone pools are more diverse than higher up; again larger rivers carry clones downstream. Clone dispersal is relatively free in a freely flowing river, while dams stop propagules in harnessed rivers. The mouths of rivers have high E. tetraedra clone diversity. Clones disperse from these clone centers to islands formed through land uplift along the northern Baltic Sea. The annual turnover of clones is high on these islands. A survey of epigeic and endogeic parthenogens on the Åland islands which serve as stepping stones between Estonia, Finland and Sweden shows an invasion route of clones across the Baltic Sea. Anthropochory (Aporrectodea rosea and Octolasion cyaneum) and hydrochory (E. tetraedra and Dendrobaena octaedra) seem to play important roles in the clone pool formation on the Åland islands. Quite recently an exotic parthenogen Dichogaster bolaui has found a curious habitat in human settlements viz., the sewer pipe system. Many clonal earthworms show significant morphological and morphometric diversity in and between sample localities but we have failed to associate this variation with the clonal variability. It seems that local factors modify the morphometrics and morphology ultimately determined by the genotype of parthenogenetic earthworms. © 2006 Springer.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Terhivuo, J., & Saura, A. (2006). Dispersal and clonal diversity of north-european parthenogenetic earthworms. In Biological Invasions Belowground: Earthworms as Invasive Species (pp. 5–18). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5429-7_2

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free