The relationship between genetic diversity, function, and stability in marine foundation species

Author:

Konefal Anastasia1ORCID,Kirkland Amanda1ORCID,Gilpin Rebecca2ORCID,Wyssmann Kathryn1ORCID,Anthony Nicola M1ORCID,Cebrian Just34ORCID,Cox T Erin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of New Orleans, New Orleans , Louisiana, United States

2. Mississippi State University , Starkville, Mississippi, United States

3. Vesta Public Benefit Corporation , San Francisco, California, United States

4. Northern Gulf Institute of the Mississippi State University , Stennis Space Center, Balch Boulevard, MS, United States

Abstract

Abstract Seagrasses, corals, marsh plants, kelps, and mangroves support valuable coastal ecosystems but are threatened by environmental stressors. The need to manage these foundation taxa has spurred more than a decade of study on the relationship between genetic diversity and function or stability. We synthesized this literature base (129 relevant publications) and found more reported instances of neutral to positive relationships between genetic diversity and function than negative. However, much of the scientific understanding is based on the response of three genera and from unreplicated observational studies that correlate genetic diversity to measured response variables. When a disturbance was present, the studies often lacked controls or baseline data. Only 5.5% of the studies robustly tested for stability. These shortcomings preclude a rigorous evaluation of whether more genetically diverse foundation populations increase stability and hinder the use of genetics-based conservation strategies. Future studies should be focused on diverse species and ecosystem-level impacts using manipulative designs.

Funder

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

University of New Orleans

Mississippi State University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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