Sweepstake reproductive success and collective dispersal produce chaotic genetic patchiness in a broadcast spawner

A long-standing paradox of marine populations is chaotic genetic patchiness (CGP), temporally unstable patterns of genetic differentiation that occur below the geographic scale of effective dispersal. Several mechanisms are hypothesized to explain CGP including natural selection, spatiotemporal fluctuations in larval source populations, self-recruitment, and sweepstake reproduction. Discriminating among them is extremely difficult but is fundamental to understanding how marine organisms reproduce and disperse. Here, we report a notable example of CGP in the Antarctic limpet, an unusually tractable system where multiple confounding explanations can be discounted. Using population genomics, temporally replicated sampling, surface drifters, and forward genetic simulations, we show that CGP likely arises from an extreme sweepstake event together with collective larval dispersal, while selection appears to be unimportant. Our results illustrate the importance of neutral demographic forces in natural populations and have important implications for understanding the recruitment dynamics, population connectivity, local adaptation, and resilience of marine populations.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Vendrami, David L.J., Peck, Lloyd S. ORCIDORCID record for Lloyd S. Peck, Clark, Melody S. ORCIDORCID record for Melody S. Clark, Eldon, Bjarki, Meredith, Michael ORCIDORCID record for Michael Meredith, Hoffman, Joseph I. ORCIDORCID record for Joseph I. Hoffman

On this site: Lloyd Peck, Michael Meredith, Melody Clark
Date:
10 September, 2021
Journal/Source:
Science Advances / 7
Page(s):
12pp
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abj4713