4.7 Article

Genomic analysis of a reef-building coral, Acropora digitifera, reveals complex population structure and a migration network in the Nansei Islands, Japan

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 20, Pages 5270-5284

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16665

Keywords

conservation genetics; genome-wide SNPs; population genetics; Scleractinia

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [20H03235, 20K21860, 26290065]

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Understanding the structure and connectivity of coral populations is crucial for marine conservation. This study reveals the complex migration tendencies and population dynamics of coral populations in the Nansei Islands, influenced by heterogeneity in ocean currents and local environments.
Understanding the structure and connectivity of coral populations is fundamental for developing marine conservation policies, especially in patchy environments such as archipelagos. The Nansei Islands, extending more than 1000 km in southwestern Japan, are characterized by high levels of biodiversity and endemism, supported by coral reefs, which make this region ideal for assessing genetic attributes of coral populations. In this study, we conducted population genomic analyses based on genome-wide, single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of Acropora digitifera, a common species in the Nansei Islands. By merging newly obtained genome resequencing data with previously published data, we identified more than 4 million genome-wide SNPs in 303 colonies collected at 22 locations, with sequencing coverage ranging from 3.91x to 27.41x. While population structure analyses revealed genetic similarities between the southernmost and northernmost locations, separated by >1000 km, several subpopulations in intermediate locations suggested limited genetic admixture, indicating conflicting migration tendencies in the Nansei Islands. Although migration networks revealed a general tendency of northward migration along the Kuroshio Current, a substantial amount of southward migration was also detected, indicating important contributions of minor ocean currents to coral larval dispersal. Moreover, heterogeneity in the transition of effective population sizes among locations suggests different histories for individual subpopulations. The unexpected complexity of both past and present population dynamics in the Nansei Islands implies that heterogeneity of ocean currents and local environments, past and present, have influenced the population structure of this species, and similar unexpected population complexities may be expected for other marine species with similar reproductive modes.

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