Artículo de revista
Spatial and temporal stability in the genetic structure of a marine crab despite a biogeographic break
Fecha
2022Registro en:
Scientific Reports (2022) 12:14192
10.1038/s41598-022-18368-5
Autor
Véliz Baeza, David Enrique
Rojas Hernández, Noemí Vaneska
Vega Retter, Caren
Zaviezo Larenas, Camila
Garrido, Ignacio
Pardo, Luis Miguel
Institución
Resumen
Elucidating the processes responsible for maintaining the population connectivity of marine benthic
species mediated by larval dispersal remains a fundamental question in marine ecology and fishery
management. Understanding these processes becomes particularly important in areas with a
biogeographic break and unidirectional water movement along the sides of the break. Based on
variability at 4209 single‑nucleotide polymorphisms in 234 individuals, we determine the genetic
structure, temporal genetic stability, and gene flow among populations of the commercially important
mola rock crab Metacarcinus edwardsii in a system in southern Chile with a biogeographic break
at latitude 42°S. Specimens were collected at eight sites within its geographic distribution, with
collection at four of these sites was performed twice. Using population genetic approaches, we found
no evidence of geographic or temporal population differentiation. Similarly, we found no evidence
of an effect on gene flow of the biogeographic break caused by the the West Wind Drift Current.
Moreover, migration analyses supported gene flow among all sites but at different rates for different
pairs of sites. Overall, our findings indicate that M. edwardsii comprises a single large population with
high levels of gene flow among sites separated by over 1700 km and demonstrate temporal stability in
its genetic structure.