Population genetic insights into establishment, adaptation, and dispersal of the invasive quagga mussel across perialpine lakes

Author:

Haltiner Linda12ORCID,Spaak Piet12ORCID,Dennis Stuart R.1ORCID,Feulner Philine G. D.34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Aquatic Ecology Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (Eawag) Dübendorf Switzerland

2. Environmental Systems Sciences ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

3. Fish Ecology and Evolution, Center for Ecology, Evolution and Biogeochemistry Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (Eawag) Kastanienbaum Switzerland

4. Aquatic Ecology, Institute of Ecology and Evolution University of Bern Bern Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractHuman activities have facilitated the invasion of freshwater ecosystems by various organisms. Especially, invasive bivalves such as the quagga mussels, Dreissena bugensis, have the potential to alter ecosystem function as they heavily affect the food web. Quagga mussels occur in high abundance, have a high filtration rate, quickly spread within and between waterbodies via pelagic larvae, and colonize various substrates. They have invaded various waterbodies across the Northern Hemisphere. In Central Europe, they have invaded multiple large and deep perialpine lakes with first recordings in Lake Geneva in 2015 and 2016 in Lake Constance. In the deep perialpine lakes, quagga mussels quickly colonized the littoral zone but are also abundant deeper (>80 m), where they are often thinner and brighter shelled. We analysed 675 quagga mussels using ddRAD sequencing to gain in‐depth insights into the genetic population structure of quagga mussels across Central European lakes and across various sites and depth habitats in Lake Constance. We revealed substantial genetic differentiation amongst quagga mussel populations from three unconnected lakes, and all populations showed high genetic diversity and effective population size. In Lake Constance, we detected no genetic differentiation amongst quagga mussels sampled across different sites and depth habitats. We also did not identify any convincing candidate loci evidential for adaptation along a depth gradient and a transplant experiment showed no indications of local adaptation to living in the deep based on investigating growth and survival. Hence, the shallow‐water and the deep‐water morphotypes seem to be a result of phenotypic plasticity rather than local adaptation to depth. In conclusion, our ddRAD approach revealed insight into the establishment of genetically distinct quagga mussel populations in three perialpine lakes and suggests that phenotypic plasticity and life history traits (broadcast spawner with high fecundity and dispersing pelagic larvae) facilitate the fast spread and colonization of various depth habitats by the quagga mussel.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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