Spatial population genetic structure reveals strong natal site fidelity in Echinocladius martini (Diptera: Chironomidae) in northeast Queensland, Australia


Autoria(s): Krosch, Matt; Baker, Andrew; Mather, Peter B.; Cranston, Peter
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

1. A diverse array of patterns has been reported regarding the spatial extent of population genetic structure and effective dispersal in freshwater macroinvertebrates. In river systems, the movements of many taxa can be restricted to varying degrees by the natural stream channel hierarchy. 2. In this study, we sampled populations of the non-biting freshwater midge Echinocladius martini in the Paluma bioregion of tropical northeast Queensland to investigate fine scale patterns of within- and among-stream dispersal and gene flow within a purported historical refuge. We amplified a 639 bp fragment of mitochondrial COI and analysed genetic structure using pairwise ΦST, hierarchical AMOVA, Mantel tests and a parsimony network. Genetic variation was partitioned among stream sections using Streamtree to investigate the effect of potential instream dispersal barriers. 3. The data revealed strong natal site fidelity and significant differentiation among neighbouring, geographically proximate streams. We found evidence for only episodic adult flight among sites on separate stream reaches. Overall, however, our data suggested that both larval and adult dispersal was largely limited to within a stream channel. 4. This may arise from a combination of the high density of riparian vegetation physically restricting dispersal and from the joint effects of habitat stability and large population sizes. Together these may mitigate the requirement for movement among streams to avoid inbreeding and local extinction due to habitat change and may thus enable persistence of upstream populations in the absence of regular compensatory upstream flight. Taken together, these data suggest that dispersal of E. martini is highly restricted, to the scale of only a few kilometres, and hence occurs predominantly within the natal stream.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/42095/

Publicador

Blackwell Publishing

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/42095/1/42095.pdf

DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2427.2010.02571.x

Krosch, Matt, Baker, Andrew, Mather, Peter B., & Cranston, Peter (2011) Spatial population genetic structure reveals strong natal site fidelity in Echinocladius martini (Diptera: Chironomidae) in northeast Queensland, Australia. Freshwater Biology, 56(7), pp. 1328-1341.

Direitos

Copyright 2011 Blackwell Publishing.

Fonte

Biogeoscience; Faculty of Science and Technology

Palavras-Chave #060204 Freshwater Ecology #060411 Population Ecological and Evolutionary Genetics #Freshwater #Wet Tropics #dispersal #downstream drift #lotic
Tipo

Journal Article