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Genetic diversity of a marine foundation species, Laminaria hyperborea (Gunnerus) Foslie, along the coast of Ireland

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posted on 2020-04-09, 13:53 authored by Kathryn M. Schoenrock, Aisha M. O’ Connor, Stéphane Mauger, Myriam Valero, João Neiva, Ester Á. Serrão, Stacy A. Krueger-Hadfield

Worldwide, kelp populations are stressed by warming, increased storms and other anthropogenic disturbances. Marine population distributions are projected to retreat poleward with climate change if they cannot adapt to changing conditions, which would potentially lead to a regime shift in subtidal habitats. In Northern Europe, Laminaria hyperborea is a subtidal ecosystem engineer whose distribution has shifted over millennia, leaving predicted areas of high genetic diversity from the last glacial maximum (LGM) near its southern distribution limit in the Iberian Peninsula. In Ireland, L. hyperborea structures communities by supporting diverse faunal assemblages and producing large quantities of organic carbon throughout the year. We investigated the genetic diversity of eight populations, ranging from the southern coast to the north-west of Ireland, using nine microsatellite loci. Diversity was found to be highest in Lough Hyne, a Special Area of Conservation (SAC), near the predicted climate refugium. We found evidence of isolation by distance, with high connectivity between populations that were geographically close, probably driven by short range dispersal of L. hyperborea propagules. Genetic diversity (measured as expected heterozygosity and allelic richness) was highest at Lough Hyne, and decreased northwards, as predicted from past range shifts. Expected heterozygosity was highest at Lough Hyne (0.706) and decreased northward, with the lowest value at Bridges of Ross (0.283). Based on these patterns, further fine-scale investigation into population diversity, dispersal and potential resilience in Irish kelp forests are necessary as warming and non-native species are observed more and more frequently.

Funding

This project was funded by the Irish Research Council Government Postdoctoral Fellowship GOPID/2016/545 (‘Closing the knowledge gap on Irish kelp forest ecology’), ASSEMBLEplus transnational access (‘Genetic Diversity of Irish Kelp (Laminaria hyperborea) from a European View (KeUVie; 6886)’) to Centro de Ciências do Mar, the Marine Institute Networking Initiative, and Environmental Protection Agency 2018-W-MS-35 (‘KelpRes: The diversity and resilience of kelp ecosystems in Ireland’) to KMS; British Phycological Society Studentship to AMOC; start-up funds from the University of Alabama at Birmingham to SAKH; Portuguese national funds from FCT – Foundation for Science and Technology grants UID/Multi/04326/2019, GENEKELP PTDC/MAR-EST/6053/2014, SFRH/BPD/88935/2012 (DL 57/2016/CP1361/CT0010) and SFRH/BSAB/150485/2019, and a Pew Marine Fellowship to EAS. MARFOR Biodiversa/0004/2015 to MV and EAS.

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