Previously unidentified genetic structure revealed for the sponge
Suberites diversicolor: implications for sponge phylogeography and
population genetics
Abstract
The relative influence of geography, oceanography and environment on
gene flow within sessile marine species remains an open question.
Detecting subtle genetic differentiation at small scales relevant to
marine protected areas is challenging in benthic populations due to
large effective population sizes, general lack of resolution in genetic
markers, potential microbial associations, and because barriers to
dispersal often remain elusive. We genotyped the sponge species
Suberites diversicolor using double digest restriction-site associated
DNA sequencing (4,826 Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms, SNPs), compared
it to same individuals using single markers (COI and ITS), and used
previously published data on the associated microbial communities from a
subset of the same locations. Studying S. diversicolor from marine lakes
at different spatial scales (1-1,400 km), along a gradient of connection
to the surrounding sea, and with different environmental regimes, we did
not detect strong effects of geographic distance, permeability of
seascape barriers or local environments in shaping population genetic
structure. All markers detected two major lineages and geographic
clustering over a large spatial scale. However, with the SNP dataset we
provide new evidence of strong population structure even at scales
<10km (average FST = 0.56), where previously none was
detected. A lack of congruence between host population structure and
microbial community patterns of S. diversicolor from the same locations
was observed, suggesting they are on different eco-evolutionary tracks.
Our results call for a reassessment of poorly dispersing benthic
organisms that were previously assumed to be highly connected based on
low resolution markers.