BMC Evolutionary Biology (Dec 2011)

The spatial scale of genetic subdivision in populations of <it>Ifremeria nautilei</it>, a hydrothermal-vent gastropod from the southwest Pacific

  • Thaler Andrew D,
  • Zelnio Kevin,
  • Saleu William,
  • Schultz Thomas F,
  • Carlsson Jens,
  • Cunningham Clifford,
  • Vrijenhoek Robert C,
  • Van Dover Cindy L

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-11-372
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 372

Abstract

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Abstract Background Deep-sea hydrothermal vents provide patchy, ephemeral habitats for specialized communities of animals that depend on chemoautotrophic primary production. Unlike eastern Pacific hydrothermal vents, where population structure has been studied at large (thousands of kilometres) and small (hundreds of meters) spatial scales, population structure of western Pacific vents has received limited attention. This study addresses the scale at which genetic differentiation occurs among populations of a western Pacific vent-restricted gastropod, Ifremeria nautilei. Results We used mitochondrial and DNA microsatellite markers to infer patterns of gene flow and population subdivision. A nested sampling strategy was employed to compare genetic diversity in discrete patches of Ifremeria nautilei separated by a few meters within a single vent field to distances as great as several thousand kilometres between back-arc basins that encompass the known range of the species. No genetic subdivisions were detected among patches, mounds, or sites within Manus Basin. Although I. nautilei from Lau and North Fiji Basins (~1000 km apart) also exhibited no evidence for genetic subdivision, these populations were genetically distinct from the Manus Basin population. Conclusions An unknown process that restricts contemporary gene flow isolates the Manus Basin population of Ifremeria nautilei from widespread populations that occupy the North Fiji and Lau Basins. A robust understanding of the genetic structure of hydrothermal vent populations at multiple spatial scales defines natural conservation units and can help minimize loss of genetic diversity in situations where human activities are proposed and managed.