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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-07-24
    Description: Marine species with planktonic larval durations of several months (teleplanic larvae) can potentially maintain demographic connectivity across large geographical distances. This perspective has important fundamental and applied implications, notably for the understanding of evolutionary and ecological processes in the marine realm, the implementation of marine protected areas, and fisheries management. Here we present, at the scale of the Northwest Atlantic, a spatial analysis of snow crab (Chionoecetes opilio, Majoidea) population genetic structure, a species that has a planktonic larval phase of 3 to 5 months. Eight microsatellite markers analysed on 847 C. opilio samples from 13 locations revealed an absence of significant genetic structure along the west coast of Greenland and within Atlantic Canada from southern Labrador to Nova Scotia. These results are consistent with a scenario of extensive demographic connectivity among C. opilio populations and have implications for the management of this species, which supports one of the most important Canadian and Greenlandic fisheries in terms of economic value. A genetic break is nevertheless identified between Greenland and Atlantic Canada, showing that genetic structure can develop within seas (the Labrador Sea in this case) despite the occurrence of very long planktonic larval stages
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
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    ESA (Ecological Society of America)
    In:  Ecology, 90 (11). pp. 3087-3098.
    Publication Date: 2020-07-30
    Description: The spatial scale of dispersal in coral reef fishes eludes ecologists despite the importance of this parameter for understanding the dynamics of ecological and evolutionary processes. Genetic isolation by distance (IBD) has been used to estimate dispersal in coral reef fishes, but its application in marine systems has been limited by insufficient sampling at different spatial scales and a lack of information regarding population density. Here, we present an analysis of IBD in the barred hamlet (Hypoplectrus puella, Serranidae) at spatial scales ranging from 10 to 3200 km complemented with SCUBA surveys of population densities covering 94 000 m2 of reef. We used 10 hypervariable DNA markers to genotype 854 fish from 15 locations, and our results establish that IBD in H. puella emerges at a spatial scale of 175 km and is preserved up to the regional scale (3200 km). Assuming a normal or a Laplace dispersal function, our data are consistent with mean dispersal distances in H. puella that range between 2 and 14 km. Such small mean dispersal distances is a surprising result given the three-week pelagic larval duration of H. puella and the low level of genetic structure at the Caribbean scale (Wright's fixation index, FST, estimate = 0.005). Our data reinforce the importance of considering population density when estimating dispersal from IBD and underscore the relevance of sampling at local scales, even when genetic structure is weak at the regional scale.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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