Abstract
Little is known about the number and rate of introductions into terrestrial and marine tropical regions, and if introduction patterns and processes differ from temperate latitudes. Botryllid ascidians (marine invertebrate chordates) are an interesting group to study such introduction differences because several congeners have established populations across latitudes. While temperate botryllid invasions have been repeatedly highlighted, the global spread of tropical Botrylloides nigrum (Herdman, 1886) has been largely ignored. We sampled B. nigrum from 16 worldwide warm water locations, including around the Panama Canal, one of the largest shipping hubs in the world and a possible introduction corridor. Using mitochondrial (COI) and nuclear (ANT) markers, we discovered a single species with low genetic divergence and diversity that has established in the Atlantic, Pacific, Indo-Pacific, and Mediterranean Oceans. The Atlantic Ocean contained the highest diversity and multilocus theta estimates and may be a source for introductions to other regions. A high frequency of one mitochondrial haplotype was detected in Pacific populations that may represent a recent introduction in this region. In comparison to temperate relatives, B. nigrum displayed lower (but similar to temperate Botrylloides violaceus) genetic divergence and diversity at both loci that may represent a more recent global spread or differences in introduction pressures in tropical regions. Additionally, chimeras (genetically distinct individuals sharing a single body) were detected in three populations by the mitochondrial locus and validated using cloning, and these individuals contained new haplotype diversity not detected in any other colonies. Current estimates of the number and rate of introductions into tropical regions are likely underestimated due to poor systematic and historical data, but molecular tools can help address these gaps. We used a multigene approach to investigate the global spread of Botrylloides nigrum, a tropical marine species in the model botryllid ascidian group of invertebrate chordates. Genetic analyses revealed a single, rather than multispecies, invasion pattern characterized by low genetic diversity across four major ocean basins; mtCOI genotyping also revealed low rates of chimerism.
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Sheets, E. A., Cohen, C. S., Ruiz, G. M., & da Rocha, R. M. (2016). Investigating the widespread introduction of a tropical marine fouling species. Ecology and Evolution, 6(8), 2453–2471. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2065
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