Journal
PEERJ
Volume 5, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.4077
Keywords
Functional diversity; RAD-Tag SNP; Climate change; Restoration; Caribbean; Bottleneck; Microsatellite; Gene flow; Conservation; Coral
Categories
Funding
- NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program [NA13NOS4820029]
- National Science Foundation [OCE-1537959, OCE-1516763]
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The advent of next-generation sequencing tools has made it possible to conduct fine scale surveys of population differentiation and genome-wide scans for signatures of selection in non-model organisms. Such surveys are of particular importance in sharply declining coral species, since knowledge of population boundaries and signs of local adaptation can inform restoration and conservation efforts. Here, we use gnome-wide surveys of single-nucleotide polymorphisrns in the threatened Caribbean elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata, to reveal fine-scale population structure and infer the major barrier to gene flow that separates the eastern and western Caribbean populations between the Bahamas and IPuertol Rico. The exact location of this break had been subject to discussion because two previous studies based on microsatellite data had come to differing conclusions. We investigate this contradiction by analyzing an extended set of 11 microsatellite markers including the five previously employed and discovered that one of the original microsatellite loci is apparently under selection Exclusion of this locus reconciles the results from the SNP and the microsatellite datasets. Scans for outlier loci in Ithe SNP data detected 13 candidate loci under positive selection, however there was no correlation between available lenvironmental parameters and genetic distance. Together, these results suggest that reef restoration efforts should use local sources and utilize existing functional variation among geographic regions in ex situ crossing experiments to improve stress resistance of this species.
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