Unlocking the secret life of blue mussels: Exploring connectivity in the Skagerrak through biophysical modeling and population genomics

Author:

Gustafsson Malin1,Strand Åsa2ORCID,Laugen Ane T.34ORCID,Albretsen Jon5ORCID,André Carl6ORCID,Broström Göran7,Jorde Per Erik5ORCID,Knutsen Halvor45ORCID,Ortega‐Martinez Olga6ORCID,Sodeland Marte4ORCID,Waern Malin68ORCID,Wrange Anna‐Lisa29ORCID,De Wit Pierre69ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Environmental Intelligence IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute Gothenburg Sweden

2. Environmental Intelligence IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute Fiskebäckskil Sweden

3. Department of Ecology Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences‐SLU Uppsala Sweden

4. Centre for Coastal Research‐CCR, Department of Natural Sciences University of Agder Kristiansand Norway

5. Institute of Marine Research, Flødevigen His Norway

6. Department of Marine Sciences University of Gothenburg. Tjärnö Marine Laboratory Strömstad Sweden

7. Department of Marine Sciences University of Gothenburg Gothenburg Sweden

8. Leibniz‐Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde Rostock Germany

9. Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences University of Gothenburg Gothenburg Sweden

Abstract

AbstractKnowledge of functional dispersal barriers in the marine environment can be used to inform a wide variety of management actions, such as marine spatial planning, restoration efforts, fisheries regulations, and invasive species management. Locations and causes of dispersal barriers can be studied through various methods, including movement tracking, biophysical modeling, demographic models, and genetics. Combining methods illustrating potential dispersal, such as biophysical modeling, with realized dispersal through, e.g., genetic connectivity estimates, provides particularly useful information for teasing apart potential causes of observed barriers. In this study, we focus on blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) in the Skagerrak—a marginal sea connected to the North Sea in Northern Europe—and combine biophysical models of larval dispersal with genomic data to infer locations and causes of dispersal barriers in the area. Results from both methods agree; patterns of ocean currents are a major structuring factor in the area. We find a complex pattern of source‐sink dynamics with several dispersal barriers and show that some areas can be isolated despite an overall high dispersal capability. Finally, we translate our finding into management advice that can be used to sustainably manage this ecologically and economically important species in the future.

Funder

European Maritime and Fisheries Fund

Interreg

Norges Forskningsråd

Publisher

Wiley

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