GENE FLOW VERSUS LOCAL ADAPTATION IN THE NORTHERN ACORN BARNACLE, SEMIBALANUS BALANOIDES: INSIGHTS FROM MITOCHONDRIAL DNA VARIATION
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- Published by The Society for the Study of Evolution in Evolution
- Vol. 55 (10) , 1972-1979
- https://doi.org/10.1554/0014-3820(2001)055[1972:gfvlai]2.0.co;2
Abstract
In reciprocal transplant experiments, Bertness and Gaines (1993) found that Semibalanus balanoides juveniles that had settled in an upper Narragansett Bay estuary survived better in that estuary that did juveniles from coastal localities. The observed pattern of survivorship led to the claim that local adaptation may result from a combination of limited gene flow between and strong selection within these habitats. Here we test the hypothesis that limited gene flow has led to habitat-specific population differentiation using sequence and restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses of the mitochondrial DNA D-loop region of S. balanoides. Samples were analyzed from replicated coastal and estuary localities in both Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island, and Damariscotta River, Maine. The patterns of FST indicate that gene flow between coast and estuary is extensive (Nm > 100) and is not lower in the estuary with lower flushing rates (Narragansett Bay). Given the high estimate of genetic exchange, adaptations for unpredictable environments seem more likely than local adaptation in this species because loci that respond to selection in one generation are essentially homogenized by the next seasons' settlement. Nevertheless, these estimates of neutral gene flow can help identify the strength of selection necessary for local adaptation to accumulate in Semibalanus. Corresponding Editor: J. NeigelKeywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Comparison of Alternative Strategies for Estimating Gene Flow from Genetic MarkersAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1997
- TEMPORAL VARIATION IN CYPRID QUALITY AND JUVENILE GROWTH CAPACITY FOR AN INTERTIDAL BARNACLEEcology, 1997
- Neutrality Tests of Molecular Markers and the Connection Between DNA Polymorphism, Demography, and Conservation BiologyConservation Biology, 1996
- Free space availability and larval substratum selection as determinants of barnacle population structure in a developing rocky intertidal communityMarine Ecology Progress Series, 1993
- Dispersal of juveniles and variable recruitment in sessile marine speciesNature, 1992
- Arctic biogeography: The paradox of the marine benthic fauna and floraTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 1992
- Contrasting amounts of geographical variation as evidence for direct selection: the Mpi and Pgm loci in eight crustacean speciesHeredity, 1991
- The mitochondrial DNA molecule ofDrosophila yakuba: Nucleotide sequence, gene organization, and genetic codeJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1985
- Racial Differences Between North American and European Forms of Balanus BalanoidesJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1964
- Balanus balanoides (L.) in the Firth of Clyde: The Development and Annual Variation of the Larval Population, and the Causative FactorsJournal of Animal Ecology, 1956