Seagrasses and Sea Meadows: 2001
Publications
Author:
Reusch, T.B.H.
Title: New markers - old questions: population
genetics of seagrasses.
Publication: Marine Ecology Progress Series
211: 261-274, 2001.
© Inter-Research
Notes: Marine
angiosperms, or seagrasses, continue to be a major focus of marine
biologists because of their important ecological role in many
coastal ecosystems. Seagrass population biology could benefit from
a population genetic perspective because genetic data enable the
extraction of useful demographic information such as isolation and
gene flow between demes. Moreover, population genetic processes
may contribute to the growing ecological risks of local population
extinction. Progress in seagrass genetics is partly driven by
novel genetic markers which detect variation at the DNA level and
overcome the limited polymorphism of allozymes. Key results of
studies in the past decade, mostly using RAPD and microsatellites,
were (1) considerable genetic and genotypic (clonal) diversity is
present in several species in contrast to earlier notions of low
polymorphism detected at allozyme loci, and (2) genetic
differentiation among populations seems to be the rule despite
earlier reports of genetic uniformity. Pronounced genetic
structure was detected between populations of 4 species examined
thus far (Posidonia oceanica, P. australis,
Zostera marina, Thalassia testudinum). The F-ST
estimates varied widely and ranged from 0.01 to 0.623 across
studies and species. Genetic differentiation at a systematic range
of scales was only studied in eelgrass Zostera marina,
where it was positively correlated with geographic distance. The
high polymorphism of RAPD or microsatellite markers will allow the
augmention of indirect estimates of gene flow by methods detecting
individual immigration events through paternity analysis or
assignment tests. Important conservation related issues such as
the level of inbreeding and the effective population size have
also been obtained from genetic marker data, but results are too
scarce at the moment to allow generalizations. In Zostera
marina and Posidonia australis, several population
genetic attributes such as clonal diversity, mating system and
effective population size varied among populations within species,
highlighting that there is no 'typical' population. An important
gap in our knowledge is whether the effects of natural population
fragmentation and patchiness enhance the genetic isolation of
populations due to anthropogenic disturbances. It is also unclear
whether genetic differentiation displayed at marker loci are
correlated with fitness-related plant traits, and whether genetic
or genotypic diversity is important for medium- to long-term
meadow persistence. An assessment of the genetic and genotypic
diversity at marker loci should be combined with experiments on
the ecological plasticity and reaction norms of genotypes
composing the populations in question. This way, the role of
genetic diversity for seagrass population maintenance and growth
in the face of changing environmental conditions can be
evaluated.
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