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Genetic connectivity of the coral‐eating sea star Acanthaster planci during the severe outbreak of 2006–2009 in the Society Islands,French Polynesia
Authors:Nina Yasuda  Coralie Taquet  Satoshi Nagai  Terutoyo Yoshida  Mehdi Adjeroud
Affiliation:1. Organization for Promotion of Tenure Track, University of Miyazaki, Miyazaki, Japan;2. Faculty of Agriculture, Department of Marine Biology and Environmental Science, University of Miyazaki, Miyazaki, Japan;3. UMR 241 Ecosystèmes Insulaires Océaniens, Université de la Polynésie Fran?aise, Tahiti, French Polynesia;4. National Research Institute of Fisheries Science, Research Center for Aquatic Genomics, Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan;5. Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Unité 227 CoRéUs2 ‘Biocomplexité des écosystèmes coralliens de l'Indo‐Pacifique’, Observatoire Océanologique de Banyuls, Banyuls‐sur‐Mer, France;6. Laboratoire d'Excellence ‘CORAIL’, Centre IRD de Nouméa, Nouméa Cedex, New Caledonia
Abstract:Occasional population outbreaks of the crown‐of‐thorns sea star, Acanthaster planci, are a major threat to coral reefs across the Indo‐Pacific. The presumed association between the serial nature of these outbreaks and the long larval dispersal phase makes it important to estimate larval dispersal; many studies have examined the population genetic structure of A. planci for this purpose using different genetic markers. However, only a few have focused on reef‐scale as well as archipelago‐scale genetic structure and none has used a combination of different genetic markers with different effective population sizes. In our study, we used both mtDNA and microsatellite loci to examine A. planci population genetic structure at multiple spatial scales (from <2 km to almost 300 km) within and among four islands of the Society Archipelago, French Polynesia. Our analysis detected no significant genetic structure based on mtDNA (global FST = ?0.007, P = 0.997) and low levels of genetic structure using microsatellite loci (global FST = 0.006, P = 0.005). We found no significant isolation by distance patterns within the study area for either genetic marker. The overall genetically homogenized pattern found in both the mitochondrial and nuclear loci of A. planci in the Society Archipelago underscores the significant role of larval dispersal that may cause secondary outbreaks, as well as possible recent colonization in this area.
Keywords:   Acanthaster planci     coral reefs  microsatellite loci  mtDNA  population genetic structure
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