Genetic and oceanographic tools reveal high population connectivity and diversity in the endangered pen shell Pinna nobilis
Author(s)
Wesselmann, Marlene; González-Wangüemert, Mercedes; Serrão, Ester A.; Engelen, Aschwin H.; Renault, Lionel; [et al.]Date
2018-03-19Discipline
Ciencias del MarKeyword(s)
Genetic connectivityDiversity
Pinna nobilis
Oceanography
Mitochondrial DNA
Mediterranean Sea
Abstract
For marine meta-populations with source-sink dynamics knowledge about genetic connectivity
is important to conserve biodiversity and design marine protected areas (MPAs). We evaluate
connectivity of a Mediterranean sessile species, Pinna nobilis. To address a large geographical scale,
partial sequences of cytochrome oxidase I (COI, 590 bp) were used to evaluate phylogeographical
patterns in the Western Mediterranean, and in the whole basin using overlapping sequences from
the literature (243 bp). Additionally, we combined (1) larval trajectories based on oceanographic
currents and early life-history traits and (2) 10 highly polymorphic microsatellite loci collected in the
Western Mediterranean. COI results provided evidence for high diversity and low inter-population
differentiation. Microsatellite genotypes showed increasing genetic differentiation with oceanographic
transport time (isolation by oceanographic distance (IBD) set by marine currents). Genetic
differentiation was detected between Banyuls and Murcia and between Murcia and Mallorca. However,
no genetic break was detected between the Balearic populations and the mainland. Migration rates
together with numerical Lagrangian simulations showed that (i) the Ebro Delta is a larval source for
the Balearic populations (ii) Alicante is a sink population, accumulating allelic diversity from nearby
populations. The inferred connectivity can be applied in the development of MPA networks in the
Western Mediterranean