4.3 Article

Phylogeography of Two Moray Eels Indicates High Dispersal Throughout the Indo-Pacific

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEREDITY
Volume 101, Issue 4, Pages 391-402

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esq036

Keywords

connectivity; gene flow; Gymnothorax; leptocephalus; panmixia; reef fish

Funding

  1. United States National Science Foundation [OCE-0454873]
  2. Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology Northwestern Hawaiian Islands [NMSP MOA 2005-008/6682]
  3. National Geographic Young Explorers Award
  4. National Science Foundation [DEB 0909756]
  5. Society of Systematic Biologists
  6. DeepFin PEET Award
  7. Professional Association of Diving Instructors Foundation
  8. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  9. Division Of Environmental Biology
  10. Direct For Biological Sciences [0909756] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Reef fishes disperse primarily as oceanic pelagic larvae, and debate continues over the extent of this dispersal, with recent evidence for geographically restricted (closed) populations in some species. In contrast, moray eels have the longest pelagic larval stages among reef fishes, possibly providing opportunities to disperse over great distances. We test this prediction by measuring mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and nuclear DNA variation in 2 species of moray eels, Gymnothorax undulatus (N = 165) and G. flavimarginatus (N = 124), sampled at 14-15 locations across the Indo-Pacific. The mtDNA data comprise 632 bp of cytochrome b and 596 bp of cytochrome oxidase I. Nuclear markers include 2 recombination-activating loci (421 bp of RAG-1 and 754 bp of RAG-2). Analyses of molecular variance and Mantel tests indicate little or no genetic differentiation, and no isolation by distance, across 22 000 km of the Indo-Pacific. We estimate that mitochondrial genetic variation coalesces within the past about 2.3 million years (My) for G. flavimarginatus and within the past about 5.9 My for G. undulatus. Permutation tests of geographic distance on the mitochondrial haplotype networks indicate recent range expansions for some younger haplotypes (estimated within; similar to 600 000 years) and episodic fragmentation of populations at times of low sea level. Our results support the predictions that the extended larval durations of moray eels enable oceanwide genetic continuity of populations. This is the first phylogeographic survey of the moray eels, and morays are the first reef fishes known to be genetically homogeneous across the entire Indo-Pacific.

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