4.8 Article

Refuting a controversial case of a human-mediated marine species introduction

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 5, Issue 4, Pages 577-584

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1046/j.1461-0248.2002.00359.x

Keywords

Littorina littorea; introduced species; coalescent; cytochrome oxidase I; internal transcribed spacer

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Human activities have strongly impacted natural communities through the introduction of non-native species in historical times. A frequently cited marine example is Littorina littorea , a common intertidal gastropod that was first reported in North America in 1840. The seemingly sudden appearance and rapid geographical spread of this species southward from Nova Scotia has led many researchers to consider L. littorea a human-mediated species introduction. This is despite allozyme and subfossil evidence that the `European periwinkle' was in North America long before 1840. Our mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequence data confirm that L. littorea has been in continuous residence in North America for at least 8000 years. It appears most likely that ecological interactions, rather than oceanographic or climatic forces, maintained the limited geographical distribution of L. littorea prior to the 19th century.

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