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Deriving connectivity from relatedness: broad-scale isolation-by-distance in the shanny Lipophrys pholis

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Deriving connectivity from relatedness: broad-scale isolation-by-distance in the shanny Lipophrys pholis. / Jeannot, LL; Mouronvalle, C; Peyran, C et al.
In: Marine Ecology Progress Series, Vol. 731, 13.03.2024, p. 9-26.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Jeannot, LL, Mouronvalle, C, Peyran, C, Olabarria, C, Beger, M, Blanco, A & Planes, S 2024, 'Deriving connectivity from relatedness: broad-scale isolation-by-distance in the shanny Lipophrys pholis', Marine Ecology Progress Series, vol. 731, pp. 9-26. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps14459

APA

Jeannot, LL., Mouronvalle, C., Peyran, C., Olabarria, C., Beger, M., Blanco, A., & Planes, S. (2024). Deriving connectivity from relatedness: broad-scale isolation-by-distance in the shanny Lipophrys pholis. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 731, 9-26. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps14459

Vancouver

Jeannot LL, Mouronvalle C, Peyran C, Olabarria C, Beger M, Blanco A et al. Deriving connectivity from relatedness: broad-scale isolation-by-distance in the shanny Lipophrys pholis. Marine Ecology Progress Series. 2024 Mar 13;731:9-26. Epub 2024 Mar 13. doi: 10.3354/meps14459

Author

Jeannot, LL ; Mouronvalle, C ; Peyran, C et al. / Deriving connectivity from relatedness : broad-scale isolation-by-distance in the shanny Lipophrys pholis. In: Marine Ecology Progress Series. 2024 ; Vol. 731. pp. 9-26.

Bibtex

@article{d4cc3c3894f9416d9bfa63290df2d343,
title = "Deriving connectivity from relatedness: broad-scale isolation-by-distance in the shanny Lipophrys pholis",
abstract = "Knowledge about the dispersal patterns of marine organisms is vital for understanding population dynamics and designing appropriately scaled protected areas and fisheries management. Assessing the extent to which populations are connected by larval exchange has been traditionally approached by delineating genetically differentiated populations. Inferring these patterns for species with high gene flow remains a challenge, as they often show panmixia over large spatial scales. In these cases, genetic connectivity may be revealed through the combination of population- and kinship-based approaches. Here, we assess the population structure and relatedness of the shanny Lipophrys pholis over 500 km along the Western Iberian Peninsula coastline, using 27 microsatellites developed for this study. As expected, given its long larval duration stage, we found high gene flow throughout the study area. However, a weak pattern of isolation-by-distance was detected by Mantel tests and large-scale relatedness patterns, suggesting decreasing genetic similarity with distance at the scale of the Western Iberian Peninsula. Conversely, we provided evidence of fine-scale connectivity at the smaller scale of the Atlantic Islands of Galicia National Park (Spain). Combining population- and kinship-based approaches may reveal previously undetected genetic differentiation within a well-connected population; however, we stress the importance of careful application and interpretation of relatedness metrics. Our findings may be broadened to other coastal organisms featuring similar life-history traits, including a relatively long larval phase, as well as comparable environmental conditions favoring dispersal by ocean currents, which could be directly applied to the management and conservation of Northeast Atlantic marine species.",
keywords = "Ecology, Aquatic Science, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics",
author = "LL Jeannot and C Mouronvalle and C Peyran and C Olabarria and M Beger and A Blanco and S Planes",
year = "2024",
month = mar,
day = "13",
doi = "10.3354/meps14459",
language = "English",
volume = "731",
pages = "9--26",
journal = "Marine Ecology Progress Series",
issn = "0171-8630",
publisher = "Inter-Research",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Deriving connectivity from relatedness

T2 - broad-scale isolation-by-distance in the shanny Lipophrys pholis

AU - Jeannot, LL

AU - Mouronvalle, C

AU - Peyran, C

AU - Olabarria, C

AU - Beger, M

AU - Blanco, A

AU - Planes, S

PY - 2024/3/13

Y1 - 2024/3/13

N2 - Knowledge about the dispersal patterns of marine organisms is vital for understanding population dynamics and designing appropriately scaled protected areas and fisheries management. Assessing the extent to which populations are connected by larval exchange has been traditionally approached by delineating genetically differentiated populations. Inferring these patterns for species with high gene flow remains a challenge, as they often show panmixia over large spatial scales. In these cases, genetic connectivity may be revealed through the combination of population- and kinship-based approaches. Here, we assess the population structure and relatedness of the shanny Lipophrys pholis over 500 km along the Western Iberian Peninsula coastline, using 27 microsatellites developed for this study. As expected, given its long larval duration stage, we found high gene flow throughout the study area. However, a weak pattern of isolation-by-distance was detected by Mantel tests and large-scale relatedness patterns, suggesting decreasing genetic similarity with distance at the scale of the Western Iberian Peninsula. Conversely, we provided evidence of fine-scale connectivity at the smaller scale of the Atlantic Islands of Galicia National Park (Spain). Combining population- and kinship-based approaches may reveal previously undetected genetic differentiation within a well-connected population; however, we stress the importance of careful application and interpretation of relatedness metrics. Our findings may be broadened to other coastal organisms featuring similar life-history traits, including a relatively long larval phase, as well as comparable environmental conditions favoring dispersal by ocean currents, which could be directly applied to the management and conservation of Northeast Atlantic marine species.

AB - Knowledge about the dispersal patterns of marine organisms is vital for understanding population dynamics and designing appropriately scaled protected areas and fisheries management. Assessing the extent to which populations are connected by larval exchange has been traditionally approached by delineating genetically differentiated populations. Inferring these patterns for species with high gene flow remains a challenge, as they often show panmixia over large spatial scales. In these cases, genetic connectivity may be revealed through the combination of population- and kinship-based approaches. Here, we assess the population structure and relatedness of the shanny Lipophrys pholis over 500 km along the Western Iberian Peninsula coastline, using 27 microsatellites developed for this study. As expected, given its long larval duration stage, we found high gene flow throughout the study area. However, a weak pattern of isolation-by-distance was detected by Mantel tests and large-scale relatedness patterns, suggesting decreasing genetic similarity with distance at the scale of the Western Iberian Peninsula. Conversely, we provided evidence of fine-scale connectivity at the smaller scale of the Atlantic Islands of Galicia National Park (Spain). Combining population- and kinship-based approaches may reveal previously undetected genetic differentiation within a well-connected population; however, we stress the importance of careful application and interpretation of relatedness metrics. Our findings may be broadened to other coastal organisms featuring similar life-history traits, including a relatively long larval phase, as well as comparable environmental conditions favoring dispersal by ocean currents, which could be directly applied to the management and conservation of Northeast Atlantic marine species.

KW - Ecology

KW - Aquatic Science

KW - Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

U2 - 10.3354/meps14459

DO - 10.3354/meps14459

M3 - Journal article

VL - 731

SP - 9

EP - 26

JO - Marine Ecology Progress Series

JF - Marine Ecology Progress Series

SN - 0171-8630

ER -