Abstract
The lack of genetic structuring reported for Acanthaster planci (L.) from major biogeographical zones
(i.e. Indian Ocean versus Pacific) may reflect a lack of data rather than confirmation of a recent and
rapid dispersal of the species worldwide. The low level of genetic variation among A. planci populations
throughout the Pacific is evidence of high levels of gene flow throughout this region. However, gene
flow among widely separated reef complexes (average number of migrants per generation, N/em,
approximately 2) is an order of magnitude less than that occurring within highly connected reef systems
like the Ryukyus and the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) (Nem approximately 20). The genetic similarity
between North-west Pacific and Australian populations is likely to reflect gene flow to each place from
the central Indo-West Pacific region. Populations peripheral to the species' main distribution show
greater genetic differentiation, probably as a result of founder effect. Some, like the Hawaiian and
western Australian populations, show reduced genetic diversity, implying colonization by a very small
number of individuals or a recent severe bottleneck in population size. Western Australian populations
appear to have been derived from eastern Australian populations in the Pacific rather than Indian
Ocean sources. On the GBR, genetic differentiation is low among populations that are undergoing
outbreaks but there is significant differentiation among populations that are not involved in outbreaks;
this suggests that a single primary source is the origin of outbreaks on the GBR. The development of
distinctive DNA markers may also allow the detailed tracking of dispersal routes of A. planci and of
recruitment within reefs.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
36 articles.
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