Symbiont diversity within the widespread Scleractinian coral Plesiastrea versipore across the northwestern Pacific


Autoria(s): Rodriguez-Lannetty, M.; Hoegh-Guldberg, I. O.
Contribuinte(s)

Otto Kinne

Data(s)

01/09/2003

Resumo

The molecular diversity of symbiotic dinoflagellates associated with the widespread western Pacific coral Plesiastrea versipora was explored in order to examine if associations between reef-building corals and symbiotic dinoflagellates change with environment. Several ribosomal DNA genes with different evolutionary rates were used.. including the large subunit (28S), the 5.8S region and the internal transcribed spacers (ITS). The phylogenetic analysis of the 28S and 5.8S rDNA regions indicated that a single endosymbiont species, highly related to one of the species of Symbiodinium in clade C (=Synbiodinium goreaui, Trench et Blank), associates with P. versipora along the Ryukyu Archipelago. The persistence of the same endosymbiont within P. versipora across this wide array of latitudes may be a result of such features as the Kuroshio Current, which brings tropical temperatures as far north as Honshu, Japan. Analysis of the faster evolving ITS rDNA region revealed significant genetic variability within endosymbionts from different populations. This variation was due to a high degree of interpopulation variability, based on the proportion of pairwise variation detected among the populations (0.95% approximately). By comparison with other studies, the results also indicate that some ITS1 haplotypes from P. versipora endosymbionts seem to be widely distributed within the western Pacific Ocean, ranging from the Great Barrier Reef to the northeast of the China Sea.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:67635

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer -verlag

Palavras-Chave #Great-barrier-reef #Pocillopora-damicornis #Seriatopora-hystrix #Gene Flow #Phylogeny #Acropora #Zooxanthellae #Ecology #Identification #Foraminifera #C1 #270601 Animal Physiology - Biophysics #770403 Living resources (flora and fauna)
Tipo

Journal Article