Invasion genomics of lionfish in the Mediterranean Sea

Author:

Bernardi Giacomo1ORCID,Azzurro Ernesto23,Bariche Michel4,Jimenez Carlos56,Kalogirou Stefanos7ORCID,Kleitou Periklis89

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Santa Cruz Santa Cruz California USA

2. CNR‐IRBIM, National Research Council Institute of Biological Resources and Marine Biotechnologies Ancona Italy

3. Zoological Station A. Dohrn Naples Italy

4. Department of Biology American University of Beirut Beirut Lebanon

5. Enalia Physis Environmental Research Centre (ENALIA) Nicosia Cyprus

6. The Cyprus Institute Energy Environment and Water Research Center Nicosia Cyprus

7. Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, Institute for Marine Biological Resources and Inland Waters Hydrobiological Station of Rhodes Rhodes Greece

8. Marine & Environmental Research (MER) Lab Limassol Cyprus

9. School of Biological and Marine Sciences University of Plymouth Plymouth UK

Abstract

AbstractThe rate of biological invasions is steadily increasing, with major ecological and economic impacts accounting for billions of dollars in damage as a result. One spectacular example is the western Atlantic invasion by lionfishes. In the Mediterranean Sea, invasions from the Red Sea via the Suez Canal (termed Lessepsian invasions) comprise more than 100 fish species, including a recent invasion by lionfish. In light of the devastating effects of lionfish in the Caribbean Sea, understanding the dynamics of Mediterranean lionfish invasion is crucial. The Lessepsian lionfish invasion started in 2012, and rapidly spread to the central Mediterranean. Here, we used thousands of RAD seq genomic markers to study the population dynamics of this invasion. While we did not find a reduction in genetic diversity between source (Red Sea) and invasive (Mediterranean) populations (i.e., bottleneck effects), we found evidence of population structure within the invasive range in the Mediterranean Sea. We found that loci that are potentially under selection may play an important role in invasion success (in particular, genes involved in osmoregulation and fin spine sizes). Genomic approaches proved powerful in examining the ecological and evolutionary patterns of successful invaders and may be used as tools to understand and potentially mitigate future invasions.

Funder

American University of Beirut

Publisher

Wiley

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