Geographic range and structure of cryptic genetic diversity among Pacific North American populations of the non-native amphipod Grandidierella japonica

被引:0
作者
Erik M. Pilgrim
Michael J. Blum
Deborah A. Reusser
Henry Lee
John A. Darling
机构
[1] United States Environmental Protection Agency,Ecological Exposure Research Division, National Exposure Research Laboratory
[2] Tulane University,Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
[3] Western Fisheries Research Center,Pacific Coastal Ecology Branch, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory
[4] U. S. Geological Survey,undefined
[5] United States Environmental Protection Agency,undefined
[6] Hatfield Marine Science Center,undefined
来源
Biological Invasions | 2013年 / 15卷
关键词
Amphipod; Invasive species; Cryptic diversity; Aoridae; DNA barcode;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Reconstructing the invasion history of aquatic invasive species can enhance understanding of invasion risks by recognizing areas most susceptible to invasion and forecasting future spread based on past patterns of population expansion. Here we reconstruct the invasion history of the Japanese amphipod Grandidierella japonica Stephensen 1938 combining information from historical collection data with molecular genetic data to better understand post-invasion range expansion and anthropogenic connectivity across the Pacific coast of North America. Compilation of collection data from bays and estuaries of the Pacific North American coast show many new localities have been colonized in the last two decades, moving outward from harbors and bays with high commercial traffic into smaller coastal locations dominated by local recreational traffic. DNA barcode sequence data for G. japonica reveals two distinct clades: one found in San Francisco Bay and sites to the north, and one also found in San Francisco Bay and sites to the south. The two clades differ by an average 7.28 % genetic distance, large enough to consider these invasive amphipods two separate species. Both northern and southern clades exhibit low levels of genetic diversity, suggesting a single introduction event for each. The presence of cryptic diversity within this invasive amphipod highlights the need for more extensive study of the invasive and native populations of aquatic invasive invertebrates to address questions of taxonomy, diversity, and invasion history.
引用
收藏
页码:2415 / 2428
页数:13
相关论文
共 165 条
[1]  
Audet D(2003)Geographic expansion of a nonindigenous crab, J Shellfish Res 22 255-262
[2]  
Davis DS(1991) (L.), along the Nova Scotian shore into the southeastern Gulf of St. Lawrence, Canada Hydrobiologia 223 239-254
[3]  
Miron G(1998)Tube-building behavior in Mol Biol Evol 15 97-103
[4]  
Moriyasu M(2010), and 2 species of Divers Distrib 16 879-891
[5]  
Benhalima K(2007)Cryptic species in a marine polychaete and their independent introduction from North America to Europe J Biogeog 34 2055-2069
[6]  
Campbell R(1999)A hitchhiker’s guide to the Maritimes: anthropogenic transport facilitates long-distance dispersal of an invasive marine crab to Newfoundland Biol Invasions 1 339-352
[7]  
Barnard JL(1996)Geographic structure, genetic diversity and source tracking Biol Conserv 78 97-106
[8]  
Sanved K(1993)The distribution of an introduced mollusc and its role in the long-term demise of a native confamilial species Science 261 78-82
[9]  
Thomas JD(1975)Pattern, process, and prediction in marine invasion ecology Bull Southern California Acad Sci 74 104-108
[10]  
Bastrop R(1998)Ecological roulette: the global transport and invasion of nonindigenous marine organisms Science 279 555-558