4.7 Article

Global phylogeography and seascape genetics of the lemon sharks (genus Negaprion)

期刊

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
卷 17, 期 24, 页码 5336-5348

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2008.04000.x

关键词

dispersal; elasmobranchs; fish; marine landscape ecology; vicariance

资金

  1. EPA Science To Achieve Results (STAR)
  2. UH NSF IGERT [0549514]
  3. Boren National Security Education Program
  4. Project Aware Research Program
  5. Dai Ho Chun Fellowship Program
  6. American Museum of Natural History Lerner-Gray Grant
  7. University of Hawaii Graduate Student Organization
  8. NSF [DGE02-32016, OCE-0453167, OIA 0554657]
  9. Division Of Graduate Education
  10. Direct For Education and Human Resources [0549514] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Seascapes are complex environments, and populations are often isolated by factors other than distance. Here we investigate the role of coastal habitat preference and philopatry in shaping the distribution and population structure of lemon sharks. The genus Negaprion comprises the amphiatlantic lemon shark (N. brevirostris), with a relict population in the eastern Pacific, and its Indo-West Pacific sister species, the sicklefin lemon shark (N. acutidens). Analyzing 138 individuals throughout the range of N. brevirostris (N = 80) and N. acutidens (N = 58) at microsatellite loci (nine and six loci, respectively) and the mitochondrial control region, we find evidence of allopatric speciation corresponding to the Tethys Sea closure (10-14 million years ago) and isolation of the eastern Pacific N. brevirostris population via the emergence of the Isthmus of Panama (3.5 million years ago). There is significant isolation by oceanic distance (R-2 = 0.89, P = 0.005), defined as the maximum distance travelled at depths greater than 200 m. We find no evidence for contemporary transatlantic gene flow (m, M = 0.00) across an oceanic distance of 2400 km. Negaprion acutidens populations in Australia and French Polynesia, separated by oceanic distances of at least 750 km, are moderately differentiated (F-ST = 0.070-0.087, P <= 0.001; Phi(ST) = 0.00, P = 0.99), with South Pacific archipelagos probably serving as stepping stones for rare dispersal events. Migration between coastally linked N. brevirostris populations is indicated by nuclear (m = 0.31) but not mitochondrial (m < 0.001) analyses, possibly indicating female natal site fidelity. However, philopatry is equivocal in N. acutidens, which has the lowest control region diversity (h = 0.28) of any shark yet studied. Restricted oceanic dispersal and high coastal connectivity stress the importance of both local and international conservation efforts for these threatened sharks.

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