Depth-structured lineages in the coral Stylophora pistillata of the Northern Red Sea

被引:0
|
作者
K. C. C. Capel [1 ]
I. Ayalon [2 ]
N. Simon-Blecher [3 ]
A. Zweifler Zvifler [4 ]
IC J. Benichou [5 ]
G. Eyal [6 ]
D. Avisar [4 ]
J. Roth [7 ]
P. Bongaerts [4 ]
O. Levy [4 ]
机构
[1] Rio de Janeiro,Department of Invertebrates, National Museum, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
[2] São Sebastiaão,Center for Marine Biology, University of São Paulo
[3] São Carlos,Department of Genetics and Evolution, Federal University of São Carlos
[4] Bar-Ilan University,The Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences
[5] The Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences of Eilat,The H. Steinitz Marine Biology Laboratory
[6] Tel Aviv University,Faculty of Exact Sciences, Porter School of the Environment and Earth Sciences
[7] The University of Western Australia,School of Earth Sciences
[8] The university of Queensland,School of the Environment
[9] Israel Police National HQ,DNA and Forensic Biology Laboratory, Division of Identification and Forensic Science
[10] California Academy of Sciences,undefined
来源
npj Biodiversity | / 4卷 / 1期
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D O I
10.1038/s44185-025-00083-9
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摘要
Coral reefs are biodiversity hotspots, where new species continue to be discovered. Stylophora pistillata, a depth-generalist coral, is widely distributed throughout the Indo-Pacific and has long been considered the poster child for phenotypic plasticity. It occupies a wide range of reef habitats and exhibits a myriad of gross morphologies. Here, we used reduced representation genome sequencing (nextRAD) to assess the genetic structure of adults and recruits of S. pistillata across shallow and mesophotic populations in the northern Red Sea (Gulf of Aqaba). Across analytical approaches, we observed a complex genetic structure with at least four genetically divergent lineages occurring sympatrically with little to no admixture and structured by depth. Morphological and physiological differences previously documented suggest that the long-considered ecological opportunism of S. pistillata in the Red Sea may, in fact, have a genetic basis. Assessment of both adult colonies and recruits within each of the lineages also revealed the prevalence of local recruitment and genetic structuring across the eight-kilometer section of the Israeli Red Sea coastline. Overall, the observed patterns confirm the presence of undescribed diversity within this model organism for coral physiology and corroborate a broader pattern of extensive undescribed diversity within scleractinian corals.
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