Project: Quantifying larval behavior to reconcile genetic connectivity with biophysical model predictions

Acronym/Short Name:PLDvFST
Project Duration:2011-09 - 2016-07
Geolocation:Florida and Caribbean

Description

Dispersal is a critical life-history trait linking ecological and evolutionary processes. Transport of planktonic larvae affects colonization success and population persistence for benthic animals, and influences genetic subdivision of populations, local adaptation, and speciation. However, recent studies question the long-held assumption that pelagic larval duration (PLD) determines how far larvae are advected. This has applied significance, as oceanographic models used to predict exchange among marine protected areas often use PLD as the key larval parameter. The investigators' data for Caribbean gastropods show genetic breaks that are not congruent with model predictions, and levels of structure that are inconsistent with larval lifespan, highlighting a need for new theory.

This research will integrate molecular and larval ecology to test the link between dispersal and larval duration in a phylogenetic framework, and determine whether Individual Based Models (IBMs) accurately predict exchange for Caribbean reef ecosystems. The PI will collect multi-locus genetic data and quantify larval behavior for 14 related, ecologically similar species of sea slugs with PLDs from 0-30 days. The PI predicts that larval behavior explains why some species are under- or over-dispersed relative to their PLD; this work will reveal key parameters needed for biophysical-coupling models to predict connectivity for coastal invertebrates. The proposal will address 3 inter-related objectives: (1) Are genetic connectivity estimates from mtDNA and nuclear markers congruent, and consistent with model predictions? Data for mitochondrial and nuclear loci will be used to test for selection on mtDNA, estimate rates of gene flow and times of divergence, and assess levels of connectivity within each species. Matrices of model-predicted exchange will be compared with genetic similarity matrices to test whether breaks in gene flow occur where predicted. (2) Are genetic connectivity and PLD correlated? More broadly, the PI will test the assumption that larval period determines dispersal, using comparative methods in a phylogenetic framework to correct for effects of relatedness among species. The PI will compare models of trait evolution with Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methods to determine if gene flow is correlated or uncorrelated with PLD, using a molecular phylogeny and multi-locus genetic data. (3) Does larval behavior explain genetic structure in species with long PLD? At least two of the focal species selected for this study are under-dispersed, with genetically isolated demes despite a 30-day PLD. Conversely, at least one short-PLD species has no genetic structure over large regions of the Caribbean. The PI will build on past work quantifying larval behavior to ask if species-specific differences in larval swimming facilitate local retention, making species deviate from expected connectivity patterns. The PI will also test whether pre-competent larvae respond to habitat cues in a way that influences dispersal, as occurs in fish. This work will reconcile life-history theory, oceanographic models, and genetics by mechanistically explaining breaks in connectivity; the results will deepen our understanding of how larval behavior can determine the pace of divergence among populations.

 


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Molecular species delimitation and gene flow in Oxynoe (PLDvFST project)2017-09-22Final no updates expected
Accessions and links for DNA sequences for three genes (COI, 16S, H3) from 18 species in order Sacoglossa (Gastropoda) from Krug et al (2011) Invert. Syst. (PLDvFST project)2017-02-14Final no updates expected
Sequences of two genes (COI, H3) for three species complexes (Elysia abei, "Plakobranchus occelatus", Thuridilla carlsoni, Elysia atroviridis): Krug et al (2013) Molec. Phylogen. Evol. (PLDvFST project)2017-02-13Final no updates expected
GenBank accession links to DNA sequences for 4 genes (COI, 16S, 28S. H3) from ~200 species of order Sacoglossa: Krug et al (2015) Syst. Biol. Supp. Table 3 (PLDvFST project)2017-02-08Final no updates expected
GenBank accessions and links for DNA sequences for three genes (COI, 16S, H3) from Elysia cornigera and E. timida (Gastropoda: Sacoglossa)in Krug et al (2011) Invert. Syst.(PLDvFST project)2017-02-01Final no updates expected
Supplemental tables for Krug et al (2015) Syst. Biol. (PLDvFST project)2017-02-01Final no updates expected
Sampled gastropod Sacoglossa taxa and collection details for phylogenetic analyses: from Krug et al (2015) Suppl. Table 1 in Syst. Biol. (PLDvFST project)2017-01-27Final no updates expected
GenBank accessions and links for sequences of three genes (COI, 16S, H3) for five Elysia spp., chiefly E. pusilla: Vendetti et al (2012) Integ. and Comp. Biol. (PLDvFST project)2017-01-26Final no updates expected
Philine spp. collection data and NCBI accessions links for 16S haplotype sequences from Krug et al (2012) Biol. Invasions (PLDvFST project)2017-01-26Final no updates expected

People

Principal Investigator: Patrick Krug
California State University Los Angeles (Cal State LA)

Contact: Patrick Krug
California State University Los Angeles (Cal State LA)


Data Management Plan

DMP_Krug_OCE-1130072.pdf (43.40 KB)
02/09/2025