Ecomorph or Endangered Coral? DNA and Microstructure Reveal Hawaiian Species Complexes: Montipora dilatata/flabellata/turgescens & M. patula/verrilli
نویسندگان
چکیده
M. dilatata, M. flabellata, and M. patula and 80 other scleractinian corals were petitioned to be listed under the US Endangered Species Act (ESA), which would have major conservation implications. One of the difficulties with this evaluation is that reproductive boundaries between morphologically defined coral species are often permeable, and morphology can be wildly variable. We examined genetic and morphological variation in Hawaiian Montipora with a suite of molecular markers (mitochondrial: COI, CR, Cyt-B, 16S, ATP6; nuclear: ATPsβ, ITS) and microscopic skeletal measurements. Mitochondrial markers and the ITS region revealed four distinct clades: I) M. patula/M. verrilli, II) M. cf. incrassata, III) M. capitata, IV) M. dilatata/M. flabellata/M. cf. turgescens. These clades are likely to occur outside of Hawai'i according to mitochondrial control region haplotypes from previous studies. The ATPsβ intron data showed a pattern often interpreted as resulting from hybridization and introgression; however, incomplete lineage sorting may be more likely since the multicopy nuclear ITS region was consistent with the mitochondrial data. Furthermore, principal components analysis (PCA) of skeletal microstructure was concordant with the mitochondrial clades, while nominal taxa overlapped. The size and shape of verrucae or papillae contributed most to identifying groups, while colony-level morphology was highly variable. It is not yet clear if these species complexes represent population-level variation or incipient speciation (CA<1MYA), two alternatives that have very different conservation implications. This study highlights the difficulty in understanding the scale of genetic and morphological variation that corresponds to species as opposed to population-level variation, information that is essential for conservation and for understanding coral biodiversity.
منابع مشابه
Genetic isolation and plasticity in Montipora dilatata and Hawaiian congeners: Where are the species boundaries? Previously funded National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) Species of Concern (SOC) work on Montipora dilatata resolved four distinct genetic groups of Montipora
Previously funded National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) Species of Concern (SOC) work on Montipora dilatata resolved four distinct genetic groups of Montipora in Hawaii: I) M. patula/M. verilli, II) M. incrassata, III) M. capitata, and IV) M. dilatata/M. turgescens/M. flabellata, with mitochondrial and nuclear markers capable of resolving ~ 1 MY differences (Forsman et al. 2009). Further wor...
متن کاملIs Montipora dilatata an endangered coral species or an ecotype? Genes and skeletal microstructure lump seven Hawaiian species into four groups
Image by J. E. Maragos. Foreground: M. capitata; above: M. dilatata; above, lower left: invasive algae (Kappaphycus/Eucheuma spp.) 2 Executive summary Montipora dilatata is considered to be one of the rarest corals known. Thought to be endemic to Hawaii, only a few colonies have ever been found despite extensive surveys. Endangered species status would have major conservation implications; howe...
متن کاملGenetic and morphological characterization of a coral Species of Concern, Montipora dilatata, in Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, Hawaii
Executive Summary Montipora dilatata (a stony coral endemic to Hawaii) is one of the rarest corals known; only a few colonies have ever been found despite extensive surveys. The taxonomic status of M. dilatata is unclear, in part because coral species boundaries in general are poorly understood. In order to examine evolutionary relationships in Montipora, a suite of molecular markers (mitochond...
متن کاملDivergent evolutionary histories of DNA markers in a Hawaiian population of the coral Montipora capitata
We investigated intra- and inter-colony sequence variation in a population of the dominant Hawaiian coral Montipora capitata by analyzing marker gene and genomic data. Ribosomal ITS1 regions showed evidence of a reticulate history among the colonies, suggesting incomplete rDNA repeat homogenization. Analysis of the mitochondrial genome identified a major (M. capitata) and a minor (M. flabellata...
متن کاملInter-Specific Coral Chimerism: Genetically Distinct Multicellular Structures Associated with Tissue Loss in Montipora capitata
Montipora white syndrome (MWS) results in tissue-loss that is often lethal to Montipora capitata, a major reef building coral that is abundant and dominant in the Hawai'ian Archipelago. Within some MWS-affected colonies in Kane'ohe Bay, Oahu, Hawai'i, we saw unusual motile multicellular structures within gastrovascular canals (hereafter referred to as invasive gastrovascular multicellular struc...
متن کامل