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Spatial genetic differentiation correlates with species assemblage turnover across tropical reef fish lineages
Vilcot, M.; Albouy, C.; Donati, G.F.A.; Claverie, T.; Julius, P.; Manel, S.; Pellissier, L.; Leprieur, F. (2023). Spatial genetic differentiation correlates with species assemblage turnover across tropical reef fish lineages. Glob. Ecol. Biogeogr. 32(4): 535-547. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/geb.13637
In: Global Ecology and Biogeography. Blackwell Science: Oxford. ISSN 1466-822X; e-ISSN 1466-8238, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keywords
    Genetic diversity
    Species diversity
    Pisces [WoRMS]
    ISW, Indian Ocean [Marine Regions]
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    ddRADseq, dispersal, Indian Ocean, macrogenetics, marine barrier, tropical reef fishes, ß- diversity

Authors  Top 
  • Vilcot, M.
  • Albouy, C.
  • Donati, G.F.A.
  • Claverie, T., more
  • Julius, P.
  • Manel, S.
  • Pellissier, L.
  • Leprieur, F.

Abstract
    Aim

    Evaluating the similarity of diversity patterns across micro- to macroevolutionary scales in natural communities, such as species–genetic diversity correlations (SGDCs), may inform on processes shaping community assembly. However, whether SGDCs not only hold across communities but also across lineages has never been explored so far. Here we investigated SGDCs across co-distributed taxa for different spatial components (α, β, γ), and formally tested the influence of dispersal traits on β-SGDCs.

    Location

    Western Indian Ocean.

    Time period

    2016–2017.

    Major taxa studied

    Tropical reef fish species with contrasting dispersal traits.

    Methods

    Using double-digest restriction-site associated DNA sequencing (ddRADseq) Single Nucleotide Polymorphism data for 20 tropical reef fishes and distribution data of 2,446 species belonging to 12 families, we analysed the correlations between within-species genetic diversity and within-family species diversity (i.e., lineage diversity) for the three spatial components (α, β, γ-SGDCs). We then related the strength of β-SGDCs per species to proxies of larval dispersal abilities.

    Results

    We detected positive and significant lineage-based SGDC only for the β component, that is, the families showing the greatest level of species turnover among sites contain the species with the greatest levels of genetic differentiation. We showed that the Monsoon Drift mainly explained the β-diversity patterns at both intraspecific and interspecific levels. Higher β-SGDCs were found for species with short pelagic larval duration and weak larval swimming capacity.

    Main conclusions

    Our study reveals a strong correlation between genetic and species β-diversity, a result explained by the presence of a ‘soft’ barrier and mediated by larval dispersal processes. This suggests that vicariance and dispersal limitation are major processes shaping β-diversity patterns from microevolutionary to macroevolutionary scales in tropical reef fishes.


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